Which Israeli company is going public on Nasdaq at a $2.4 billion valuation and who raised $77 million?

CTech Daily Roundup: Battling online Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism is a year-round job

CTech 23:1808.04.21
Cellebrite to go public through a SPAC merger at a $2.4 billion valuation. The Israeli digital intelligence company is set to merge with Nasdaq listed TWC Tech Holdings Corp II. Read more

 

TipRanks announces $77 million investment round to support retail investor boom. Israeli-based fintech company provides a simplified stock research platform that makes alternative datasets accessible and visual for retail investors. Read more

Cellebrite UFED TOUCH. Photo: Cellebrite Cellebrite UFED TOUCH. Photo: Cellebrite

 

Analysis | $1 billion in a single day - Israeli tech sets new investment record. Around $500 million didn't go into company accounts, but rather to those of investors, employees, and executives via secondary deals. Read more

 

Battling online Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism is a year-round job. Social Media platforms have long been criticized for allowing, and sometimes encouraging, anti-Semitic posts. Meet the folks trying to hold them accountable. Read more

 

Israel Innovation Authority signs MoU with Stellantis. Its aim is to establish and enhance cooperation in technological innovation worldwide. Read more

 

Opinion | The government must not let the recent tech bonanza go to waste. With the market at a boiling point, the next government has to act quickly so that all Israelis can share the wealth. Read more

 

HR Post Covid | When given the choice, 70% of Asperii returned to the office after Covid-19. The company gave its employees the freedom to choose where they worked from - and received unexpected results. Read more

 

Forter joins the Adobe Exchange Partner program as an Accelerate partner. Forter has processed more than $200 billion in online transactions and protects almost one billion users from fraud. Read more

 

Israeli telco Bezeq fined over $2 million for misleading consumers about internet speeds. Consumer Protection and Fair Trade Authority found Bezeq guilty of providing customers internet service at speeds significantly lower than they had been promised. Read more