RapLeaf explained

Rapleaf
Type:Private company
Key People:Auren Hoffman, Manish Shah
Industry:Database marketing
Num Employees:11–50 (as of November 2, 2012)[1]
Parent:TowerData
Foundation:March 2005
Location Country:USA
Location:Evanston, Illinois

RapLeaf was a US-based marketing data and software company that was acquired by email data provider TowerData in 2013.

Company

RapLeaf was founded in San Francisco by Auren Hoffman and Manish Shah in March 2005.[2] In May 2006 the Founders Fund led a seed round of about $1 million, including angel investors such as Peter Thiel and Ron Conway.[3] In June 2007 a second round included Founders Fund, Rembrandt Venture Partners and included Conway.[4] [5]

The company's first product was a meta-reputation system that allows users to create reviews and ratings of consumer transactions, which they then contribute to multiple e-commerce websites.[6] On January 26, 2007, Rapleaf released Upscoop, a service that allowed users to search for and manage their contacts by email address across multiple social networking sites.[7]

In 2011, Rapleaf created a data onboarding division named LiveRamp,[8] which later spun out into an independent company which was acquired by Acxiom in 2014 for $310 million.[9]

In 2012, Rapleaf began selling segmented data tied to email addresses for marketers to personalize email communications. Around September 2012 the company moved its headquarters from San Francisco to Chicago, and Phil Davis became chief executive, replacing Hoffman.[10]

Rapleaf was acquired by TowerData in 2013.[11]

Controversy and backlash

On May 15, 2006, eBay removed a number of auction listings where the seller had included links to Rapleaf, claiming they were in violation of its terms of use.[12]

In late August 2007, Upscoop began e-mailing entire contact lists that were provided by their users when they log in. This caused some criticism,[13] and the company later apologized for doing so.[14]

On July 10, 2008, Rapleaf changed its interface so that it no longer allows users to search people by email addresses.[15] Instead, the service only allows a registered user to view their own reputation and the websites (social and business networking) to which their own e-mail address is registered. There was an immediate negative backlash by companies and individuals[16] who had been using Rapleaf to both manage reputations and investigate the authenticity of people.

In October 2010, the Wall Street Journal reported that Rapleaf had transmitted personally identifiable information, including Facebook and MySpace IDs. Rapleaf said it had inadvertently transmitted that info and had ceased the practice.[17] On October 28, 2010, Facebook banned Rapleaf from scraping data on Facebook, and Rapleaf said it would delete the Facebook IDs it had collected.[18]

A 2011 report said the company could tell the food preferences of employees of major companies.[19]

Between 2007-2013, Rapleaf received significant backlash over the data collection practices and sale of individuals' personal information to advertisers. As a public spokesperson for the company, much of the criticism was directed at the CEO Auren Hoffman personally.[20] [21] [22] [23] [24] A 2010 investigation by The Wall Street Journal revealed that the company transmitted identifying details about individuals to at least 12 companies, violating the terms of service of Facebook and MySpace. A spokesperson at Facebook said it had "taken steps. . .to significantly limit Rapleaf's ability to use any Facebook-related data."[25] [26] [27] When confronted by The Wall Street Journal and CNet, it quietly revised its privacy policy both times.[28] CNNMoney described RapLeaf as "selling your identity," and TechCrunch characterized its method of identifiable data extraction of Google and Microsoft employees as "creepy."[29] [30] RapLeaf later became known as LiveRamp after entering new markets. LiveRamp spun off the RapLeaf business and sold it to TowerData in 2013.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rapleaf Company Profile . LinkedIn . 2012-11-02.
  2. Web site: Notice of Sale of Securities . Form D . US Securities and Exchange Commission . July 10, 2006 . November 3, 2013 .
  3. Web site: Matt Marshall . Rapleaf, the e-commerce reputation manager, raises ~$1M to take on eBay . San Jose Mercury News . Silicon Beat . June 11, 2006 . November 3, 2013.
  4. News: Rapleaf Secures Venture Capital Funding . June 1, 2007 . Press release . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090722181525/http://www.rapleaf.com/business/press_release/vc_funding . July 22, 2009 . November 3, 2013 .
  5. News: CNet . August 31, 2007 . At Rapleaf, your personals are public . Stefanie . Olsen .
  6. News: Networker Hoffman launches Rapleaf — to track your reputation beyond eBay . Venture Beat . Matt Marshall . April 24, 2006 . November 3, 2013 .
  7. Web site: Peter Ha . Stalk Your Contact List with UpScoop . Tech Crunch . January 26, 2007 . November 3, 2013.
  8. News: RapLeaf CEO Hoffman Discusses New LiveRamp Solution And Company Strategy AdExchanger. 2011-07-08. AdExchanger. 2018-01-15. en-US.
  9. News: Acxiom To Buy LiveRamp For $310M AdExchanger. 2014-05-14. AdExchanger. 2018-01-15. en-US.
  10. Web site: Meet our Management Team . Company web site . https://web.archive.org/web/20120913010953/http://www.rapleaf.com/about-us . September 13, 2012 . live . November 3, 2013 .
  11. Web site: Email Matching Solutions Promise To Connect Offline And Online Data. Aquino. Judith. December 17, 2013. AdExchanger. June 12, 2015.
  12. Web site: Michael Arrington . Michael Arrington . eBay Bans Rapleaf Links . . May 17, 2006 . 2007-01-26.
  13. Web site: Rapleaf and Upscoop spam .
  14. Web site: Start-ups, privacy, and being wrong . Rapleaf Blog . Auren . Hoffman . 6 September 2007 . 2010-03-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070917133813/http://blog.rapleaf.com/2007/09/06/start-ups-privacy-and-being-wrong/ . 2007-09-17 . dead .
  15. Web site: Changes to Rapleaf Services . Rapleaf Blog . Auren . Hoffman . 10 July 2008 . 2010-03-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080801162920/http://blog.rapleaf.com/2008/07/10/changes-to-rapleaf-services/ . 2008-08-01 . dead.
  16. Web site: Comments on blog post 'Changes to Rapleaf Services' . Rapleaf Blog . Rapleaf users . 2010-03-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080822211429/http://blog.rapleaf.com/2008/07/10/changes-to-rapleaf-services/#comments . 2008-08-22 . dead.
  17. News: Emily Steel . A Web Pioneer Profiles Users by Name . Wall Street Journal . October 25, 2010 . November 3, 2013.
  18. Web site: Christopher Heine . Rapleaf Agrees to Leave Facebook Alone . ClickZ . November 1, 2010 . 2010-11-01.
  19. Web site: Googlers Buy More Junk Food Than Microsofties (And Why Rapleaf Is Creepy) . March 22, 2011 . Robin Wauters . Tech Crunch . November 3, 2013 .
  20. Web site: The rap on Rapleaf, the "trust meter" you can't trust.
  21. Web site: Online Behavior Tracking and Privacy: 7 Worst Case Scenarios. . 3 November 2010.
  22. Web site: Can Auren Hoffman's Reputation Get Any Worse? . September 18, 2007 . Tim Faulkner . Gawker . November 3, 2013 .
  23. Web site: Why is RapLeaf still tracking me across the Web?. 9 April 2013.
  24. Web site: The Creepy Company Compiling a File on Your Online Activity—Using Your Real Name.
  25. News: A Web Pioneer Profiles Users by Name. Wall Street Journal. 25 October 2010. Steel. Emily.
  26. News: Facebook in Privacy Breach. Wall Street Journal. 18 October 2010.
  27. News: Thousands of Web Users Delete Profiles from RapLeaf. Wall Street Journal. 26 October 2010. Steel. Emily.
  28. Web site: People search engine Rapleaf revises privacy policy.
  29. Web site: Googlers Buy More Junk Food Than Microsofties (And Why Rapleaf is Creepy). 22 March 2011 .
  30. Web site: Rapleaf: The company that sells your identity - Oct. 21, 2010.