BillGuard

BillGuard is a personal finance security and productivity company. Its mobile and website application scans credit card and debit card transactions, alerting users to possible scams, billing errors, fraudulent charges and hidden fees.[2][3]

BillGuard
Private
IndustryComputer software, Internet, Personal finance
Founded2010
FounderYaron Samid, Raphael Ouzan[1]
Headquarters,
ProductsRich Internet application, Mobile application
Websitewww.billguard.com

As of October 2014, BillGuard reports it has flagged over $60 million of suspect charges on behalf of its users, drawing from over $1 billion of monitored transactions.[4][5][6]

In September 2015, BillGuard was acquired by Prosper Marketplace.[7][8] BillGuard was renamed Prosper Daily.

On August 31, 2017, Prosper ended Prosper Daily service, suggesting as alternative the Clarity Money app "which offers many of the same features as Prosper Daily."[9]

BillGuard was named "one of the top online banking innovations of all time" by MarketConsensus.[10] and a “Top 10 Tech Company” by American Banker.[11]

BillGuard is also ranked as the "Top 2015 Most Powerful Financial Protection App" by AdvisoryHQ News.[12]

Products

In July 2013, BillGuard released a free iPhone app that encourages users to take a more active role in monitoring their charges than the company's previous ‘set and forget’ web application.[13][14] In May 2014, BillGuard released a free Android app.[15]

BillGuard sends personalized data breach alerts that notify users if they've shopped at a merchant who has been breached.[16]

BillGuard draws upon a combination of crowdsourced feedback from its users, data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, complaints posted across the Internet, and its own algorithms to determine what charges to bring to users’ attention via email and smartphone push alerts. [17] [18]

BillGuard Resolve directly connects merchants with customers who wish to inquire about the merchants’ charges on their cards.[19] BillGuard FI for financial institutions aims to lower those institutions’ transaction inquiry and dispute processing costs.[20]

History

The company was founded in 2010 by Yaron Samid and Raphael Ouzan, with $3 million in seed funding from Bessemer Venture Partners, Founder Collective, SV Angel, IA Ventures, Social Leverage and Yaron Galai.[21]

BillGuard launched at TechCrunch Disrupt New York in May 2011, where it won the 2nd place prize.[22] In 2011 the company raised a $10 million financing round from its seed funders plus Vinod Khosla’s Khosla Ventures, Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund and Eric Schmidt’s Innovation Endeavors.[23] BillGuard was awarded the "2011 Big-Data Startup of the Year" at the O'Reilly Media Strata Conference,[24] and won ‘Best of Show’ at the Finovate conference in both 2011 and 2012.[25]

The Jerusalem Post writer Joseph Sherman notes: "Business Schools around the world study how the Rothschild family transformed the world of international banking. In a practical spin on the story, today, on Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv, Raphael Ouzan is living his dream in Israel as the co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of a start-up that is changing how consumers monitor their credit and debit card spending, and helping us get our money back from unwanted and deceptive charges."[26]

Grey Charges Report

In July 2013, BillGuard and the Aite Group released a comprehensive Grey Charges report that found in 2012 U.S. cardholders received over $14.3 billion in deceptive and unwanted credit and debit card charges.[27] According to the report, one in three American card holders receives at least one grey charge each year, at an average of $215 per person per year.[28][29][30][31]

gollark: The Chinese remainder theorem?
gollark: Immediately undergo exponentiation modulo 7, then.
gollark: I do not understand that sentence ("The alternative is work a political method for political reason.") and it is not pizza, I have had no commercial relations with pizza companies, I am not paid to subliminally advertise pizza, etc.
gollark: I guess maybe in politics/economics/sociology the alternative is something like "lean on human intuition" or "make the correct behaviour magically resolve from self-interest". Not sure how well those actually work.
gollark: - the replication crisis does exist, but it's not like *every paper* has a 50% chance of being wrong - it's mostly in some fields and you can generally estimate which things won't replicate fairly well without much specialized knowledge- science™ agrees on lots of things, just not some highly politicized things- you *can* do RCTs and correlation studies and such, which they seem to be ignoring- some objectivity is better than none- sure, much of pop science is not great, but that doesn't invalidate... all science- they complain about running things based on "trial and error and guesswork", but then don't offer any alternative

References

  1. "Raphael Ouzan interview on Startup Camel Podcast". Startup Camel. Archived from the original on 20 March 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  2. "Personal-Finance Security Firm Raises $10 Million". The Wall Street Journal.
  3. Yakal, Kathy. "BillGuard (iPhone)". PCMag.
  4. "Analytics Startup BillGuard Has Flagged $50M in Suspect Charges". American Banker.
  5. "BillGuard Launches iPhone App To Help Credit Card Users Catch And Dispute "Grey Charges"". TechCrunch.
  6. "BillGuard now helps Brits, Aussies and New Zealanders combat credit card fraud and hidden merchant fees".
  7. Orpaz, Inbal. "Israeli Startup BillGuard Bought for Reported $40m".
  8. "Ranking". Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  9. "Prosper Daily". www.prosper.com. Archived from the original on 2018-09-28. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
  10. "BillGuard – One of the Top Banking Innovations of all Time". MarketConsensus. Archived from the original on 2015-06-20. Retrieved 2015-06-20.
  11. "Top 10 Tech Companies to Watch". American Banker.
  12. "BillGuard Review & Ranking (Is BillGuard Safe?)". AdvisoryHQ.
  13. Lawler, Ryan (July 25, 2013). "BillGuard Launches iPhone App To Help Credit Card Users Catch And Dispute "Grey Charges"".
  14. "BillGuard app manage your spending easily". theappzine.com, Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  15. "BillGuard Launches Its Personal Finance App On Android And Adds Data Breach Alerts". May 15, 2014.
  16. "BillGuard Alerts You When a Retailer or Bank You Use Is Breached". May 15, 2014.
  17. "Top 10 Tech Companies to Watch".
  18. "Personal Finance Security Start-up Closes $10 Million Round".
  19. https://www.billguard.com/merchants. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  20. https://www.billguard.com/fi. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. Rao, Leena. "BillGuard Raises $3M To Track Hidden Fees, Billing Errors On Credit Card Bills". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2018-01-26.
  22. Rao, Leena. "And The Winner Of TechCrunch Disrupt NYC Is…Getaround!". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  23. "BillGuard Gets $10M From Khosla Ventures, Founders Fund, Innovation Endeavors, Others - PE Hub". PE Hub. 2011-10-18. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  24. "Strata Startup Showcase: Strata 2011 - O'Reilly Conferences, February 01 - 03, 2011, Santa Clara, CA". conferences.oreilly.com. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  25. "FinovateFall 2011 Best of Show Winners Named - Finovate". Finovate. 2011-09-21. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  26. Sherman, Joseph J (2013-07-30). "High-Tech Aliya: A start-up immigrant shares secrets to success". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 29 July 2014. Business Schools around the world study how the Rothschild family transformed the world of international banking. In a practical spin on the story, today, on Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv, Raphael Ouzan is living his dream in Israel as the co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of a start-up that is changing how consumers monitor their credit and debit card spending, and helping us get our money back from unwanted and deceptive charges.
  27. Aite Group (2013). "The Economic Impact of Grey Charges on Debit and Credit Cardholders and Issuers" (PDF).
  28. Lipka, Mitch (July 26, 2013). "YOUR MONEY-How to avoid 'gray charges' on credit card bills". Reuters.
  29. "Are 'gray charges' draining your wallet?". Fox News. July 26, 2013.
  30. Malcolm, Hadley (July 25, 2013). "Consumers rack up $14.3 billion in 'gray' charges". USA Today.
  31. http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/six-ways-merchants-fill-your-credit-card-unwanted-gray-charges-1C7481282?franchiseSlug=technolog. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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