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Twitter acquires BackType (YC S08)

263 points| razin | 14 years ago |blog.backtype.com | reply

48 comments

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[+] nestlequ1k|14 years ago|reply
I don't get it. Are startups now just a new resume? How are BackType users supposed to react to this? How are users supposed to trust other API startups if they can just get the rug pulled out from them like this?

I'm happy for the team, but is there not any way they could have transitioned the project to other developers and still joined twitter fulltime?

[+] andrewljohnson|14 years ago|reply
Start-ups are businesses. They make money for their investors and founders. Handing off the code sounds like hippie poppycock to me. I suppose they can do it if they want to, but they don't have to.
[+] swombat|14 years ago|reply
[ YC08 ]

BackType has raised a total of $1.32m according to http://www.crunchbase.com/company/backtype

No speculation as to the size of the acquisition, but I guess anything between $10-100m is possible, which would give YC a return of about 3% (6% adjusted down to 70% twice) of that, or somewhere between $300k and $3m?

"YCombinator: turning $15k into $300k in 3 years"

Not bad.

Edit: This is based on the idea that BackType is successful, and had other options (which may not be the case, since their QuantCase/Compete graph is going down)... if they were about to go bust, the price could be considerably lower... but if they were doing well, I imagine investors would have blocked a sale lower than $10m.

[+] webwright|14 years ago|reply
Two thoughts:

Quantcast/Compete is almost no relationship to reality when you are talking about b2b startups or startups with sub-10M/month uniques. They are wrong in magnitude and growth trends as often as they are right, in my experience.

Also, if an investor DID block a sale, that fact would come up any time they were competing to fund future YC companies, so it probably wouldn't be worth it for an investor to do that... Yet another value that YC provides.

[+] rokhayakebe|14 years ago|reply
I think it is more sub $10M. Their product will be discontinued, so it appears they are buying the team. Bactype looks like a company with a handful of employees so you probably want to count $1M/engineer or maybe $1.2M.
[+] reso|14 years ago|reply
I've been told by people close to the company that it was in the $50-100 million range. Given how aggressive the Backtype guys are, this doesn't shock me at all.

$100 mil split three ways is quite a prize.

[+] plinkplonk|14 years ago|reply
Old readwriteweb article

"Secrets of BackType's Data Engineers - How do three guys with only seed funding process 100 million msgs a day?"

http://www.readwriteweb.com/hack/2011/01/secrets-of-backtype... HN discussion http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2097926

I am not a Clojure fan, but I found BackType engineer Nathan Marz's fusion of Datalog, Clojure and Hadoop to create Cascalog very impressive, and was looking forward to Storm.

[+] apgwoz|14 years ago|reply
Given Twitter's history with Open Source, I'm guessing we'll still see Storm.
[+] messel|14 years ago|reply
I enjoyed reading about Nathan's work as well. He was the only team member I knew of.
[+] icey|14 years ago|reply
A) Congratulations to the BackType team! I wonder if they're the first Clojure-heavy startup to be acquired. It will be interesting to see what happens to their technology stack after a couple of years.

B) Does this impact the open-sourcing of Storm?

[+] plam|14 years ago|reply
Flightcaster is even earlier. FC might have been the first.
[+] beagledude|14 years ago|reply
Storm will be rewritten in scala
[+] joblessjunkie|14 years ago|reply
I wish that when a headline announced "Big company acquires little startup you've never heard of" that it would be accompanied by some explanation of what the little startup actually does, and why it is interesting.
[+] scorpioxy|14 years ago|reply
You would typically know about it if you're into social media analytics and metrics and its effects on advertising and so on.

Their technology stack is very cool. The amount of data it needs to process is staggering. And this whole field is relatively new so there are tons of potential in it.

[+] vegashacker|14 years ago|reply
The interest here (for most people I assume) is the YC funding they got in 08. (Or "O8" as it seems to be written in the headline.)
[+] retube|14 years ago|reply
Yeah agreed. And their site doesn't seem to say anything either, other than they've been acquired by Twitter.

Looking at Google search results it appears to be social analytics. I guess they spit out metrics on brand mentions, retweets, compute scores or ranks on "buzz", and probably do sentiment too. But I'm guessing wildly.

[+] thecoffman|14 years ago|reply
Congrats guys! I worked with Nathan, and he's a brilliant guy. Well deserved success.
[+] swannodette|14 years ago|reply
I wonder what affect this will have on the open sourcing of Storm.
[+] gvnonor|14 years ago|reply
I think you meant effect.
[+] randall|14 years ago|reply
Black shirt acquired! Congrats guys!
[+] apgwoz|14 years ago|reply
If you're referring to the "I made something people want," is it true? It sounds like they really want the engineers, which they didn't make (their parents did, I guess they deserve the shirt then?).

Yes, I'm joking. Congrats to the team! They should wear their shirts proudly!

[+] pdelgallego|14 years ago|reply
Congrats to the guys of BackType.

I have been very tempted to apply to their internship during the winter.

[+] siculars|14 years ago|reply
Looks like they shut their free api down around noon today. Not even a tweet. Boo.
[+] edawerd|14 years ago|reply
Congrats guys. Well deserved.
[+] ddemchuk|14 years ago|reply
and yet no profit has been had...good job twitter, good job
[+] chr15|14 years ago|reply
Companies rarely buy other companies for their profits. Most of the time it's a strategic move e.g. Twitter purchasing Tweetdeck to protect itself from aggressive moves by UberMedia