IIW XVIII
Doc Searls VC Panel
Doc Searls:Keith Teare:this is an unconference, so we don't have panels, and yet here we are with a VC panel because someone made it
identity is rock that the computer industry has been pushing up a hill for years
How can we solve problems in the marketplace by focusing on the individual rather than the institution?
Derek Andersen:I have got many bruises from identity, and I don't know how to solve it. Real Names was meant for non-english name mapping
we built a startup called Contact Card that was supposed to let people be contacted without email everyone as a url
I have my own URL at teare.com/keith where you can chat with me - but the chat service is centralised
Noah Doyle:I don't trust anyone to centralise my identity, not google, not facebook. we're seeing more anonymous sites #indieweb
When somebody has that much power over our identities, they will en dup using it for evil #indieweb
Doc Searls:we have an investment in a company called spike that puts a browser in the cloud that goes away when you stop using it
Keith Teare:has the investment environment changed after Snowden?
Derek Andersen:there's an app called cover.me that is a cloaking app that wraps chat and photo-sharing in encryption, based in China
I used to be a Trotskyist - you read all the books and repeat the quotes and a good idea becomes dogma
Keith Teare:if you pay for something you immediately think it is worth more than something for free
ask customers "how much would you pay for this?" so you have a biz model on the first day
Doc Searls:systems that depend on attention form people to grow are hard to combine with payment - eg app.net, just.me
Twitter is popular and free, but they put crap in front of you all the time, to get your attention
I'm forced into crowd funding. We have 14 companies at Archimedes Labs and they all had trouble being funded
there are now 3 kinds of seed: Family Seed, Pre-Seed and Seed
No-one funds an idea any more, you have to get it up and running for free
you can get a little bit of money for a prototype, maybe $100k, but then you need to get traction
If you get traction, the growth capital is unlimited - you'll get $100M
This encourages small ideas done quickly, not things that take tome to groe.
Keith Teare:You could poison an idea with a bad implementation?
Derek Andersen:After Yuri Milner invested in Facebook late, he made all the VCs switch to Growth Funds and be Private Equity
Keith Teare:there are lots of indicators for traction - eg Y Combinator counts as traction.
You can get funding if you have a track record, but never if you're unknown
Amit Shah:if someone takes 10% of your company and expects something in 3 months, you will build a small idea
Keith Teare:there is not a true distributed net. The routers are controlled by a few people.
I'm not worried by the advertising model - that is dying a natural death. we're moving to real solutions
Anandan Jayaraman:Google's biz model depends on searches from laptops and desktops - we do less searching on mobile it's an app world there
we're beginning to see infrastructure as a service for mobile like Parse, Urban Airship take off
Amit Shah:finding liquidity is the hard thing for these models - can it be embedded elsewhere to grow?
Don Gordon:we're looking for ideas that re unique, not me too ideas. We like defensibility, so don't do apps
I have an interest in SMB apps and there is a lot of VRM there, if you can give then new independence from big vendors