Securly CEO Uses Artificial Intelligence to Keep Kids Safe Online
*By Tracey Cheek*
Securly is a start-up with a simple mission: to keep kids safe online. And the artificial intelligence company has just raised $16 million in series B funding to expand the reach of its social media tracking capabilities to more parents and schools.
“We are going to take this money and invest in research and development and scaling up sales and distribution across America,” CEO and co-founder Vinay Mahadik told Cheddar.
The funding round was led by Defy Partners with participation by Owl Ventures. The infusion brought Securly’s total venture capital raised to date to $24 million.
Securly looks for online signs of cyberbullying, self-harm, and other digital threats both at school and at home. It currently has over 500,000 parents on its parent portal and serves more than 7 million total students and over 5,000 schools. It has a market penetration of over 10 percent of U.S. public school districts.
While big digital players like Facebook's ($FB) Instagram and Google ($GOOGL) have implemented their own tools for blocking unsafe content from kids, Mahadik says there is little evidence of adoption by parents.
“What we have seen over the past five years is schools and parents don't have the time to try and use all the solutions by each of the different giants out there,” Mahadik said. “Google, Microsoft ($MSFT), Apple ($APPL) all came out with their own solutions and we have not seen any evidence that parents actually using these solutions together in a typical household.”
With products both for school and home, Mahadik said Securly can offer a unified solution keep kids safe throughout their day.
"That's allowed the company to be a five-year-old startup competing with 20-year-old incumbents and still be extremely successful," he said.
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/securly-using-artificial-intelligence-to-keep-kids-safe-online).
An independent watchdog within the IRS reports that while taxpayer services have vastly improved, the agency is still too slow to resolve identity theft cases. And National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins says those delays are “unconscionable.” Erin M. Collins said in the report released Wednesday that overall the 2024 filing season went smoothly, though IRS delays in resolving identity theft victim assistance cases are worsening. It took nearly 19 months to resolve self-reported identity theft cases as of January, and Wednesday's report states that now it takes 22 months to resolve these cases.
Amazon.com Inc. surpassed $2 trillion in market value for the first time in afternoon trading on Wednesday. The push higher for Amazon’s stock market valuation comes a little more than a week after Nvidia hit $3 trillion and briefly became the most valuable company on Wall Street. Nvidia’s chips are used to power many AI application and its valuation has soared as a result. Amazon has also been making big investments in AI as global interest has grown in the technology. Most of the company’s focus has been on business-focused products.
Climate change doesn’t just mean more extreme weather – it also leads to billions of dollars in lost productivity, tourism, and stresses infrastructure.
It’s an annual tradition: the Fed’s banking ‘stress test.’ A year after the regional banking crisis, there are good reasons to make sure they’re prepped.