Dice snags $6M to win more fans for its frustration-free ticketing platform

Dice snags $6M to win more fans for its frustration-free ticketing platform



London-based ticketing startup Dice, which sells mobile tickets without booking fees and with a current focus on millennials wanting to discover new bands to see live, has closed a $6 million Series A funding round.

The round was led by Evolution Equity Partners with participation from existing investors White Star Capital, Designer Fund and Kima Ventures, along with several music industry angel investors. It also added new investor Lumia Capital for the round.

With the Series A, which closed in June but is being announced now, Dice has raised $10 million to date — topping up to its initial $1.6M in seed funding in the interim. It’s grown to 42 employees over that time, including a music and data science team focused on building machine learning algorithms to help users figure out what their next big night out should be via a shortlist of recommended gigs shown below each listed event.

Handily its investor roster includes DeepMind co-founders Mustafa Suleyman and Demis Hassabis — a connect that Dice CEO and co-founder Phil Hutcheon tells TechCrunch has been very helpful as it develops its recommendation algorithms. It’s also aiming to make its data work for promoters to help them figure out when and where to put on a gig, and even what to charge. So it’s aiming to serve both sides of the music industry: fans and artists.

The app includes a waitlist feature where fans who miss out on buying a ticket in the primary sale can add their name to be notified if another Dice user subsequently wants to return tickets to resell via the app (at the same price). This then generates demand data that Dice can use to help promoters and artists run more successful events in future.

Machine learning’s a big part of our future as we expand and go into new territories.

“Machine learning’s a big part of our future as we expand and go into new territories — to help understand new things,” says Hutcheon. “Because it’s easy to know your own city but when you go into new cities and especially as you expand and scale what are the right venues for this type of artist to play at? Does their audience go to this venue or that venue? What’s the best price to get someone to attend the concert? What was the waiting list like for that artists?

“The weather? The time of the year? What else is on that night? All these things factor in to the success of an event. And one of the things that we’ve been trying to teach promoters is that it’s probably not a good business model to have every concert available go on sale at nine o’clock on a Friday. Maybe stagger it through the week. It’s okay for it not to sell out in five minutes — it will sell out, but it might just take a little bit longer… As long as each venue is full on the night, that’s fine. That’s our objective.”

We last covered Dice almost two years ago when it launched its iOS and Android apps in its first city, London. Since May this year it’s been live nationwide in the U.K., and Hutcheon says it’s now selling 35 per cent of its tickets outside London.

“We joke around that Netflix is our competitor because they’re trying to keep people in — and we’re trying to get people out,” he says, while conceding that a more traditional rival would be a ticketing giant like Ticketmaster. Although Dice is intentionally far more selective in what it sells.

Dice claims its app is on the phones of close to half (40 per cent) of the millennials in London at this point, although Hutcheon won’t break out active users yet.

He will say that over 700 artists have sold tickets on Dice thus far (it never sources tickets via secondary routes — and is vocally anti-tout, including building its own tech aimed at spotting and preventing touts from buying up tickets; a mission helped by Dice tickets being tied to the mobile device they are bought on).

He also says they have signed up all the venues they want to work with thus far — emphasizing that Dice remains an intentionally curated gigs experience, so they only put events on the app which they personally rate and think their primary audience of up to 33-year-olds will also enjoy.

The team is particularly pleased about snagging a partnership with Apple that will see Dice offering tickets for acts performing at the Apple Music Festival in London this year — through a series of in-app competitions. Another bit of news it’s announcing today.

The Dice pitch from the get-go has been about building a fan-focused, trusted events brand — using seasoned gig goers to power expert curation to give its users the confidence to spend money to go out. It has evolved from an initial human-only in-app gig curation to a blend of human and algorithmic recommendation to try to crack the new (live) music discovery problem at scale.

Nor do they just have new/up-and-coming artists on Dice. Some very big and mainstream artists, playing in massive stadium venues, have also allocated tickets for sale on Dice — including Justin Bieber, Adele and Taylor Swift. But then not all millennials are going to want to go and see a lesser known grime artist play in a basement in Hackney Wick. Some of these kids even want to go see Mumford & Sons — another mainstream artist Dice has sold tickets for via the app… So there’s an inevitable element of variety needed to cater to users’ music tastes.

At the last count, Hutcheon says the app had around 1,400 UK gigs on it. “All really, really good”, he asserts. “Everything on Dice is good. We’re creating this universe where we have quality on there.” While at the same time trying, with the recommendation features, to account for variety of taste — and how taste can fluctuate within the same person. So, in other words, just because you went to see that one grime artist that one time doesn’t mean you only want to see grime artists all the time…

“We’ve taken our time to do discovery because we want to see what works,” he tells TechCrunch. “And it’s pretty amazing how accurate it is. The next release of discovery on Dice… will have [a user’s] top ten artists to check out over the next month, based on your behavior within Dice.”

Why the focus on millennials? Because they’re going out more, of course. And the occasional high profile Taylor Swift gig aside, Hutcheon says Dice’s “sweet spot is identifying new artists, building those new artists up and getting them to larger venues” — which typically means selling cheaper tickers. (Which in turn means its youthful users can afford to go out more often and therefore use the app more. So, in short, Dice gets to roll more.)


“You want people who use Dice multiple times a month — not just goes to one Bruce Springsteen concert a year and that’s it,” he adds. “That’s what we really focus on. How do fans discover the new artists and get to the concert, know about them, and then discover the next one?”

Dice is grossing “eight figures” in ticket sale transactions at this point, according to Hutcheon — which he describes as “pretty good” going for just two years in. Although it’s not actively monetizing yet — beyond a few sponsored gigs with brands like Red Bull.

“We know how we want to monetize but we’re still building the product and still growing,” he says, adding: “We just need to get a bit bigger.”

The new funding will be going towards more product dev work — with a fully fledged launch of its discovery recommendation feature due soon (a rough-cut MVP version is live now), likely next month; and work ongoing for a feature that will allow users to transfer a ticket to a friend through the app (while preserving Dice’s anti-tout features).

It’s also eyeing international expansion — with Dublin set to be its first city launch outside the UK. A U.S. launch is on the cards too, slated for the end of this year or early next, though Hutcheon talks excitedly about Dice’s potential in various European cities too. A big part of his job is making the decisions about where to focus, he says, adding: “There’s still a bunch of things we need to build — which will hopefully be finished by the end of October. And that’s when our focus is outside of the UK.”

With the core tech of the ticketing platform built, Hutcheon reckons launching into new locations can happen quickly — a case of getting people on the ground to scope out the music scene and determine the right sorts of venues/gigs for the audience. Dice employs a team of A&R scouts to go to gigs and find new bands that put on a good live show. (That’s actual humans going to gigs to find the next cool live band; robot scouts most definitely aren’t on the roadmap, he laughs.)

“It may not need to be a choice between the US and Europe; we may be able to do everything at once,” he adds. “What we’ve seen when we’ve launched outside of London is it’s not too much work on the ground… Because we’ve built an end-to-end solution from buying the tickets, automatically paying promotors, having discovery promote the events themselves.

“For outside of London we have two people looking after the whole of the UK and that’s it… So for me it’s just making sure that when we do go into a territory that we have a long term plan. That we don’t just turn up and then six months later retreat.”

Ultimately, for all its music passion and pedigree, the team is also looking beyond gigs — with the core ticketing platform clearly applicable to other verticals. And, along with international expansion, launching into additional verticals is one way to grow usage without having to compromise a ‘curated for quality’ mission.

Getting big enough to see a path to monetizing without losing the inherent selectiveness of its brand promise looks like it’s lining up to be Dice’s post-Series A challenge.

Hutcheon cites theatre and sports as two other verticals on its radar for 2017, although whether any apps it launches for those segments would also be Dice-branded or called something entirely different is yet to be determined.

“We are concentrating on music right now but I think this time next year we would be in different verticals like sports and theatre,” he says. “Music is something that we’re super passionate about, and will always be in our hearts, but the technology side it is a lot of people spending a lot of time solving complex things — and it can address issues in different arenas.”

“Maybe you could pre-order your Tesla on Dice,” he adds. “If you think about it, there’s so many people trying to buy something at the same time — and being able to handle that traffic, and let people know if they haven’t got the ticket immediately that they’re on the waiting list.

“The worst thing is to go on sale at nine o’clock and then be stuck in a queue for 35 minutes or hours… And then at the end of it being told ‘oh sorry, we couldn’t get you a ticket’. So we’ve built it in a way that within a few minutes you’ll know if you haven’t got a ticket. And we’ll put you onto a waiting list, and when someone can’t make it it’s your best chance to get a ticket.”

So from tickets — to potential Tesla buyers… But if you’ve solved the problem of serving surge demand with a frustration-free mobile sales experience then your tech has the potential to scale beyond selling £5 tickets for Toyboy & Robin at The Nest. Or even £55 for Taylor Swift in Hyde Park.
WhatsApp to share user data with Facebook for ad targeting — here’s how to opt out

WhatsApp to share user data with Facebook for ad targeting — here’s how to opt out

Facebook-owned messaging hulk WhatsApp has announced a big exchange to its seclusion contract which, once a individual accepts its new T&Cs, present see it line to part some human data with its parent associate - including for ad-targeting purposes on the latter company.

"[B]y coordinating solon with Facebook, we'll be healthy to do things suchlike bar essential metrics roughly how ofttimes fill use our services and better fight email on WhatsApp," WhatsApp writes in a journal on the travel today.

"Facebook can offer outperform soul suggestions and demonstrate you much applicable ads if you acquire an calculate with them. For illustration, you mightiness see an ad from a friendship you already product with, rather than one from someone you've never heard of."

WhatsApp leave also be distribution the assemblage with the "Facebook lineage of companies" - so presumably its soul aggregation could also be fed to VR resolute Optic Rift, other Fb acquisition, and photo-sharing scheme Instagram.

WhatsApp collection that will be shared under the new T&Cs includes the phone confine a mortal misused to examine their story, and the live example they old the operate.

Two pieces of information which - on a creepiness attain of 'personal intel you'd kinda not pardner over to a data-mining tech giant' - are both reactionist up there.

You can read the riddled WhatsApp privateness contract here.

There is an option to opt out of whatsoever of the accumulation sharing (specifically for ad and creation purposes)  - see minify eat this post for solon information - tho' most users module retributive tap 'I agree' to WhatsApp's new T&Cs without representation them and realizing what they are agreeing to.

This is why, as we've said before, T&Cs imbibe. And why human consent to a monolithic seclusion alter same this should sure not fail opt people in.

Isolation vs information

This is doubtless a immense step-change for a force that has typically prided itself on championing human privacy, including completing a rollout of end-to-end encryption crossways its total function early this period, and continuing to play requests from regime to ability over somebody information.

But once WhatsApp united to be acquired by data-mining social scheme star Facebook, backwards in Feb 2014, the oeuvre was arguably on the paries for any pro-privacy stance.

Facebook is in the enterprise of monetizing exercise via interest-based publicizing fed by gathering the individualised assemblage of its users. WhatsApp's example concern interpret, of charging users a gnomish period subscription fee for an ad-free messaging pairing, was discontinued after Facebook took over control of the force.

The annual $1 fee was ditched in Jan this period, but WhatsApp works does not acquire a compeer sector worthy - assumption its anti-ads stance (although it is laying the groundwork to subject up sector accounts).

At the clip of the acquisition Facebook said it would be keeping the messaging hulk independent, despite several provable intersection with its own Facebook Messenger app.

Piece WhatsApp fail Jan Koum claimed there would be no changes. "Here's what give exchange for you, our users: naught. WhatsApp give remain free and operate independently," he wrote at the example, adding: "There would get been no partnership between our two companies if we had to cooperation on the nucleus principles that will ever delimit our militia, our exteroception and our production."

Sudden impertinent a couple of eld and one set generality - reclusiveness - is now existence, if not only compromised, at slightest loosened - specified that Facebook testament now be healthy to statement users of its own friendly services with WhatsApp users. It testament also be able to line human utilization of its services vs reflection on the messaging app, as WhatsApp feeds it contact intel via the 'last used' communication.

It's not luculent from the WhatsApp diary spot if different user aggregation will be common with Facebook. The phrasing suggests this is alone researchable, although if a someone has updated to the latest edition of the app, which end-to-end encrypts all accumulation, then their messaging aggregation at littlest cannot be distributed, so stretch as the being they are messaging has also updated.

WhatsApp also makes this outlet in its journal move, noting: "When your messages are end-to-end encrypted, exclusive the fill you are messaging with can show them - not WhatsApp, Facebook, or anyone else."

But that's merciful of wanting the part nigh letting Facebook triangulate users across two monolithic services, with over a billion existent users apiece. It relic to be seen whether that collapsing of boundaries between two definite services faculty draw the aid of assemblage covering regulators in Continent, which has statesman stringent privacy rules, and where Facebook has already faced quadruplicate collection security related investigations and legitimate actions - and continues to do so.

We've asked WhatsApp for a cosmopolitan name of everything it intends to get with Facebook, and for a broad recite of everything Facebook intends to do with the aggregation it present be receiving on WhatsApp users and their usage of the company - and present update this situation with any response.

As symptomless as phone amount and measure seen information, TechCrunch understands Facebook present also be fed intel on a WhatApp user's operating grouping, floating land encrypt, transplantable bearer codification, jam declaration and gimmick identifier. All of which afford up fruitful tracking/ad-targeting possibilities.

But this looks rattling much same Facebook trying to 'fill in' wanting mobile sound ascertain information via the more super WhatsApp writing assemblage - relinquished that the latter requires users to furnish a periodical to test an reason, whereas it is practical to use Facebook without supplying your versatile name (albeit, Facebook power rise know grabbed your digits via your friends uploading their contacts' books to the operate anyway& And the conjugation merchandise

Facebook add your phone number
WhatsApp says the information is beingness distributed to "coordinate author and modify experiences crosswise our services and those of Facebook and the Facebook family" - exploit on to notice the multitude cardinal particular examples:

We give be able to many accurately ascertain unparalleled users
We can healthier fisticuffs email and discourtesy
If you are a Facebook human, you mightiness see wagerer somebody suggestions and many pertinent ads on Facebook
In WhatsApp's secrecy contract it fleshes this out a soft many, including noting possible marketing and ad-targeting use-cases for distribution its somebody accumulation with Facebook - work (inflection mine):

We linked the Facebook household of companies in 2014. As air of the Facebook kin of companies, WhatsApp receives entropy from, and shares information with, this unit of companies. We may use the message we get from them, and they may use the accumulation we part with them, to aid direct, render, turn, read, produce, proof, and industry our Services and their offerings. This includes helping turn fund and conveyancing systems, savvy how our Services or theirs are old, securing systems, and warring email, assail, or wrongdoing activities. Facebook and the else companies in the Facebook stock also may use substance from us to change your experiences within their services specified as making product suggestions (for See writer roughly the Facebook bloodline of companies and their seclusion practices by reviewing their privacy policies.

One specified marketing use-case for Facebook to puddle use of the WhatsApp sound number collection is for its Usage Audiences ad message, whereby businesses using its program can take ads based on an existing client lense slant they get.

So any WhatsApp users that acquire precondition a business the aforementioned seaborne sound limit they use for the app can be served targeted ads by that selfsame line via Facebook.

Spell a Facebook set use-case for the sound assort data is to grow the soul recommendations it can direct - by it beingness competent to discover author networks of friends, based on linking many fill to transplantable numbers.

Biased opt-out

Opting out of the data-sharing exclusively does not seem to be realistic, but WhatsApp is offering a differential opt out - specifically for Facebook ad targeting and product-related purposes.

Nevertheless it notes that accumulation present noneffervescent be mutual "for opposite purposes specified as improving infrastructure and effort systems, module how our services or theirs are misused, securing systems, and fighting spam, snipe, or misconduct activities".

So there is no way to totally opt out, stubby of telescoped of holdfast using WhatsApp.

A WhatsApp advocate declined to comment on why it is not giving users a good opt out of data-sharing with Facebook, but in a statement the proponent said: "We interpret group with WhatsApp accounts strength requirement to opt out of sharing their record assemblage to alter their Facebook experiences. They change an additional 30 life to opt out after accepting the new status so they make quantify to ruminate their choices."

How to opt out of intercourse assemblage for Facebook ad targeting 

WhatsApp information two ways to opt out of sharing aggregation for Facebook ad targeting on its diary here.

Firstly if you haven't already agreed to the new T&Cs you can opt out before agreeing to the new status by tapping to see the brimful terms of function and privacy contract - and scrolling to a interact at the lowermost of the credit - where there's a check-box alternative for distribution the accumulation which you then untick before touch agree…

WhatsApp T&C
WhatsApp T&CIf you've already conventional the new T&Cs without unchecking the box to acquire your entropy with Facebook WhatsApp is also content a thirty-day window to wee the same selection - via the settings diplomatist in the app.

To recitation your opt out in this scenario you require to go to Settings > Informing > Acquire my chronicle content in the app and uncheck the box/toggle the curb displayed there. And do so within the thirty-day pane. Presumably, after that, flatbottom this unjust opt out will discontinue.

New Earth-Like Exoplanet Could Be Discovery of the Century

New Earth-Like Exoplanet Could Be Discovery of the Century



Artist’s rendering of the planet Proxima orbiting the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri. (Image: ESO/M. Kornmesser

In what’s being hailed as one of the biggest astronomical discoveries of the century, scientists with the European Southern Observatory (ESO) todayconfirmed the discovery of an Earth-like exoplanet in the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri—our nearest neighboring star. Details of the team’s discovery were just published in Nature.
Rumors of a possible Earth-like exoplanet first surfaced on August 12 in the German weekly Der Spiegel. Citing an anonymous source with the La Silla Observatory research team, the magazine claimed the rumored planet “is believed to be Earth-like and orbits at a distance to Proxima Centauri that could allow it to have liquid water on its surface—an important requirement for the emergence of life.”
Now we know those rumors were true: There is clear evidence for a planet orbiting Proxima Centauri, a small red dwarf star located just 4.25 light years away, slightly closer to Earth than the famous binary pair of Alpha Centauri A and B. It’s been dubbed Proxima b, and the ESO team pegs its mass as being roughly 1.3 times that of Earth.


Its orbit is 4.3 million miles from Proxima Centauri, just 5 percent of the distance between Earth and our own Sun. But the star is also much cooler than our Sun, so Proxima b still lies within the so-called “habitable zone” for exoplanets, with temperatures sufficient for water to be in a liquid state on the surface.
Since the first exoplanet was discovered in 1995, astronomers have identified more than 3000 such bodies orbiting distant stars. “We live in a universe that is teeming with terrestrial planets,” Pedro Amado of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalalucia said during a press conference this morning. Red dwarf stars like Proxima Centauri in particular are believed to be rife with small, rocky Earth-sized planets.
According to lead author and project coordinator Guillem Anglada-Escude of Queen Mary University of London, the first hints of this new planet appeared in 2013, but there was insufficient evidence to claim discovery. The latest observation campaign is called Pale Red Dot (because Proxima Centauri is a red dwarf), inspired by Carl Sagan’s famous description of Earth as a pale blue dot.
The team of 31 scientists from eight countries relied on the Doppler effect to detect a faint wobble in Proxima Centauri’s spectrum of light, which approaches and recedes from Earth every 11.2 days at around 3 MPH. Such a wobble could be caused by the gravitational pull of an orbiting planet. By combining data from the Pale Red Dot campaign with earlier data collected between 2000 and 2014, the astronomers confirmed a sharp peak—well above the threshold for discovery—in the Doppler shift data indicative of an Earth-sized exoplanet.


Infographic comparing the orbit of Proxima b around the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri with the same region of our solar system. (Image: ESO/M. Kornmesser/ G. Coleman)

The technology to detect Proxima b has been around for at least ten years, so why has it taken so long for astronomers to make the discovery? It’s because Proxima Centauri is pretty active as stars go, and its natural brightness can mimic the signal of a possible planet. The team relied on observations with two other telescopes to chart how the star’s brightness changed over time, enabling them to exclude the possibility of a false positive. There is just a 1 in 10 million chance that this signal is a false positive, according to Anglada-Escude.


Lead author Guillem Anglada-Escudé speaking at a press conference in Garching, Germany, this morning. (Image: ESO/M. Zamani)

It’s not yet clear whether this new exoplanet has an atmosphere. Because Proxima Centauri is a fairly active star, Proxima b suffers x-ray fluxes approximately 400 times greater than what we experience here on Earth, and this could cause any atmosphere to blow away.
But Ansgar Reiners of the University of Gottingen in Germany said that it really depends on how and when the exoplanet formed. Did it form further out, with water present, and then migrate closer to its star, or did it form very close to Proxima Centauri? The former scenario would make an atmosphere more likely.
“There are many models and simulations that produce very different outcomes, including possible atmosphere and water,” said Reiners. “We have no clue, but the existence of [an atmosphere] is certainly possible.” That would bode very well for the possibility of the planet harboring life. And the relative closeness to our solar system makes robotic exploration feasible within a generation.
“The lifetime of Proxima is several trillion years, almost a thousand times longer than the remaining lifetime of the Sun,” Harvard University’s Abraham (Avi) Loeb, who chairs the advisory committee for billionaire Yuri Milner’s Breakthrough Starshot Initiative, told Gizmodo. “A habitable rocky planet around Proxima would be the most natural location to where our civilization could aspire to move after the Sun will die, five billion years from now.”


Artist’s rendering of the surface of Proxima b. (Image: ESO/M. Kornmesser)

Announced to great fanfare in April, the Starshot Initiative is a $100 million research and engineering program seeking to lay the foundations for an eventual interstellar voyage. The first step involves building light-propelled “nanocrafts” that can travel up to 20 percent the speed of light. Such a spacecraft would reach the Alpha Centauri star system just over 20 years after launch. Currently, the project’s scientists are trying to demonstrate the feasibility of using powerful laser beams to propel a lightweight sail.
According to Loeb, the discovery of a potentially habitable planet around Proxima Centauri provides an excellent target for a flyby mission. “A spacecraft equipped with a camera and various filters could take color images of the planet and infer whether it is green (harboring life as we know it), blue (with water oceans on its surface), or just brown (dry rock),” he told Gizmodo. “The curiosity to know more about the planet—most importantly whether it hosts life—will give the Starshot Initiative a sense of urgency in finding out more facts about the planet, especially those that cannot be inferred with existing telescopes from our current vantage point on Earth.”
“We certainly hope that within a generation, we can launch these nano probes,” Peter Warden of the Breakthrough Prize Foundation said during this morning’s press conference—perhaps by 2060. “We now know there’s at least one very interesting target that’s within range of our proposed system. We can get the images to see if there is life there, possibly advanced life. Those are the great questions, and I think they’re going to be answered this century.”


Note: Avi Loeb will be joining Gizmodo today from 2:00 -2:30 PM ET. He’ll answer all your questions about this exciting new discovery, the hunt for exoplanets in general, and the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.