OpenWeb

OpenWeb is a social engagement platform that builds online communities around digital content.[1] OpenWeb works with publishers to bring conversations back from social networks to publisher sites.

OpenWeb
Type of businessPrivate
Type of site
Privately held company
Available inMultilingual
Founded2012 (2012)
HeadquartersNew York, NY,
United States
Area servedWorldwide
Founder(s)Nadav Shoval
Roee Goldberg
Ishay Green
Key peopleNadav Shoval (CEO)
Roee Goldberg (COO)
IndustryInternet
URLopenweb.com
Launched2012 (2012)
Current statusActive

Headquartered in New York City, the company also has an office in Tel-Aviv Yafo, Israel.

History

The company was founded in 2012 as Spot.IM by Israeli software architects Nadav Shoval and Ishay Green.[2] Roee Goldberg joined as Co-Founder and COO in 2014.[3]

In 2016, Spot.IM raised $13 million from Index Ventures and AltarR Capital, along with other notable technology investors, in a Series A round.[4]

In 2017, co-founder and CEO, Nadav Shoval, was inducted into the second annual Forbes Israel 30 Under 30 list.[5] In addition, the company finalized its Series C investment round of $25M, led by New York City-based fund - Insight Partners, alongside Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, Altair VC and Norma Investments.[6][7]

In 2019, Spot.IM raised $25 million in Series D funding.[8] The new funding was led by previous investor Insight Partners along with Norma Investments, AltaIR Capital, Cerca and WGI Group.[8]

In 2020, the company was renamed OpenWeb.[9]

gollark: C#/Java are annoyingly verbose.
gollark: I think Python is a good language to start learning things with.
gollark: Apparently whoever wrote the specifications for what people learn in "computer science" thought it was important that people know about this, and for consistency or something they designed their own assembly language (which does not actually run on anything).
gollark: (technically a family of them, but whatever)
gollark: Assembly is basically a very low-level language which directly compiles to machine code, which is what the CPU hardware runs.

See also

References

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