IRL founders Abraham Shafi and Genrik Khachatryan are suing investors for intentionally sabotaging the company.
At its peak, IRL was poised to become an alternative way to host events for Gen Z, who were using Facebook less and less.
CEO Shafi said: Paused It was ordered by IRL in April to investigate allegations of misconduct. In June, IRL’s board of directors discovered after an investigation that 95% of the company’s 20 million users were fake. The founders now claim investors accounted for the 95% figure “as an excuse to shut down the company and return capital to shareholders.”
The lawsuit specifically names Goodwater Capital’s Chihua Qian, SoftBank’s Selina Dale, and Floodgate’s Mike Maples. From these investors his social calendar app raised more than $200 million and the valuation brought him $1.17 billion. Notably, SoftBank led IRL’s $170 million Series C round in 2021. Mr. Shafi and Mr. Khachatryan accused the investors of wanting to shut down the company because they were “trying to finance a large portion of the company’s $40 million in cash reserves.”
Although IRL is defunct, the remaining board members deny the founders’ claims.
“Immediately after the Shafi outage, IRL experienced a significant drop in the number of daily active users virtually overnight. This was not due to an outage,” IRL and its board said in a statement, and an IRL spokesperson said: Elliott Sloan shared with TechCrunch. The same report that found 95% of users are fake also cited “the existence of private groups with millions of duplicate names, irregular signatures from Hotmail, Yahoo email addresses, and burner email addresses. The statement said they also discovered “suspicious user behavior such as Said. Forensic reports show that his IP address from proxy-his servers was used extensively, with individual accounts cycling through his IP address and device type, which could be linked to user behavior. indicates that it is invalid.
“Based on this, and evidence of Shafi’s misappropriation of company funds and repeated obstruction of investigations, the board, after several months of consideration, has concluded that the company’s future prospects are unsustainable.” The statement concludes.
As of December of last year, the SEC. ongoing investigation IRL may have misled investors and violated securities laws.
IRL is just one once-hot start-up that has come under fire for potentially tampered metrics. Investors say Bolt and co-founder Ryan Breslow of the giant one-click checkout company misrepresented the company’s financials as it sought to raise $355 million in a Series E round. raised concerns and faced SEC investigation. But 15 months later, the SEC said the company likely not to be prosecuted. And earlier this year, the SEC charged student financial aid startup Frank with defrauding JPMorgan, which acquired the company for $175 million in 2021. JPMorgan has filed a lawsuit accusing Frank’s founder Charlie Jarvis of defrauding millions of customers to get her bank to buy her. company.
IRL lawsuit by tech crunch On Scribd
Source: techcrunch.com