Korean Startup Coinplug Raises $400k, Half in Bitcoin, Half in Fiat
Korean startup Coinplug has closed an investment round paid partly in bitcoin. Coinplug raised $400,000 from Cupertino-based fund SilverBlue, with half the amount raised in bitcoin and the rest in fiat currency. The startup plans to launch a digital currency exchange, wallet and merchant platform in Korea in mid-December. "It's SilverBlue's first investment," said SilverBlue managing director Richard Yun. "In Korea, people take to new technologies really quickly, so I think [bitcoin usage] is going to boom in Korea, like China." According to Yun, who has a board seat at Coinplug and will....
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Coinplug has raised $400,000 half in fiat half in Bitcoin. Coinplug plans to be just like Coinbase except for the Korean market. The ease and security of Coinbase is one of the factors that led the price run up in the first half of 2013. For the first time, Americans were able to buy and sell Bitcoins with the same ease that they bought and sold things using Paypal. Orders placed on Coinbase were placed directly on Mt. Gox at the time and more buys than sells generally meant that the price was going up. Coinplug seeks to provide this service to Koreans, a notoriously technologically....
South Korean bitcoin services startup Coinplug announced this week that it has secured another $400,000 funding in a personal investment from Tim Draper of venture capital firm DFJ. Chol Hwan Kim from Key Initiatives Technical Entrepreneur also participated in the investment. This funding is in addition to the $400,000 Coinplug has already received from Silicon Valley investor SilverBlue in November last year. Bitcoin ATM, Gangnam style. As well as its bitcoin exchange, Coinplug also develops wallet and merchant payment software. Last month it even launched its own two-way bitcoin ATM in....
Coinplug wishes to clarify to Korean readers that, while users can request to buy bitcoins over-the-counter at 7-11 stores now, the physical okBitcards will be available from the end of February. South Korean bitcoin services company Coinplug is rolling out a pre-paid bitcoin purchasing service to around 24,000 convenience stores across the country, with 8,000 7-Eleven stores already participating. The company says its 'okBitcard' service will be on sale in other major chains by the end of January. With those numbers, it will be the most widespread distribution of its kind in the world to....
Coinplug, the South Korean bitcoin exchange and merchant software developer, has released three apps for Android devices that include a bitcoin wallet, a trading app, and a POS system for merchants. They are the first mobile bitcoin apps available in Korean. The company's website also now features a map to find merchants accepting bitcoin and using its POS software. Maps will be updated daily to include any new businesses, which Coinplug also supplies with Korean-language 'bitcoin accepted here' window signs. Coinplug has developed its own native payment processing software, currently....
South Korean bitcoin multi-services company Coinplug announced yesterday it has closed a Series A funding deal worth $2.5m from mainly local venture capitalists. The new investment brings the firm to a total of $3.3m raised so far. This week's deal notably included bitcoin venture capitalist Tim Draper, but was led by Mirae Asset Venture Investment, an arm of Seoul-based financial industry giant Mirae Asset. The round also included major Korean VC firm Bokwang Investment Corp, Capstone Partners and DSC Investment. Coinplug had previously received two funding rounds worth $400,000 each in a....