Block-chain API provider Chain has raised new investment of $9.5m, bringing its total funding so far to $13.7m.
The company, which helps developers build bitcoin apps by providing fast access to the block chain, received the funding from a number of investors including Kevin Ryan, Barry Silbert, Scott Banister, Homebrew, 500 Startups and Pantera Capital.
Silbert, who is the founder of Bitcoin Opportunity Corp, said:
“Behind the scenes and without a lot of fanfare or public awareness, Chain has built the definitive bitcoin developer platform. I’m thrilled to back the Chain team alongside a fantastic group of investors.”
The round was led by Khosla Ventures, which was started by Vinod Khosla, a co-founder of computer giant Sun Microsystems.
With the announcement, Chain has also gained a new board member, Keith Rabois, who is part of the so-called ‘PayPal Mafia’, having formerly been an executive at the company. Rabois is currently a partner at Khosla Ventures and has previously held the positions of COO at Square and vice president of business and corporate development at LinkedIn.
Some of those who contributed to Chain’s seed round of $4.2m have returned to top up the latest round, including RRE Ventures, Thrive Capital and SV Angel.
Expansion plans
Adam Ludwin, founder of Chain, revealed the new funding will be used to expand the company’s team and build out its product offerings.
“The company is currently based in San Francisco and Los Angeles, but we’re moving everything to San Francisco in September, then we’ll be hiring pretty quickly,” he said.
Ludwin explained that there are currently eight people working at the company, but he envisages the team growing to 15 by the end of the year.
The entrepreneur, who invested in Vine in the early days of the video-sharing service, said he is principally looking to hire data and product engineers. He hopes this will enable Chain to create a “robust and reliable service” not just for startups, but enterprises and financial institutions too.
Adam Ludwin (far left) with other members of the Chain team.Branching out
Ludwin said the company’s longer-term vision is to also cater for non-financial uses of the block chain, such as smart contracts, adding:
“We’re very interested in helping bitcoin itself to evolve and to be leading contributors in helping bitcoin scale and be more robust going forward.”
The company currently has four or five product ideas in development and expects to launch two or three of these by the end of the year.
“The product that the world sees right now is just the tip of the iceberg – it’s really just the foundation that enables what we really want to bring to market,” Ludwin said.
He mentioned his team is also exploring developments in other digital currencies, specifically mentioning ethereum, ripple and stellar.
“We are slowly, deliberately, but definitely bringing other currencies to our platform,” he explained.
Money-making model
Currently, Chain is in beta, offering a free block-chain API to developers. Ludwin said the company will come out of beta “definitely by the end of the year, but probably sooner”.
However, he stressed:
“We will always have a very large free tier on the platform and developers who are just starting out on a platform will never be asked to pay.”
When an enterprise or financial institution starts to use Chain’s products at scale, a fee structure will be put in place.
The company will also charge for premium features, which are currently in development. These products will sit on top of the API base Chain has built.
“The base really is a data product, it provides fast and reliable access to the block chain. But there are all these pillars we will be building on top of that and these are the products people will pay for.”
Focus on mobile
Last month, Chain launched an iOS fingerprint API and, according to Ludwin, the response from developers was “tremendous”:
“There are a lot of developers who have forked it and are building services. I anticipate that there will be a lot of fingerprint-based bitcoin wallets on iOS in the fall when the new operating system is released.”
Given the positive response received in relation to this project, the company is looking to make mobile development a large part of its operations going forward.
Barry SilbertChain
Original author: Emily Spaven