Anonymous ID: 5bc7bc Nov. 9, 2020, 1:29 p.m. No.11562873   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3081 >>3165 >>3230 >>3339 >>3433 >>3482

Scytl also offers election training to pollwatchers…

 

Scytl has provided Online Election Worker Training in the United States since 2006.

 

In the 2016 General Election, Scytl helped train nearly 40,000 election workers, in more than 15 states.

 

KEK now it makes all sense does it, anons?

 

https://www.scytl.com/en/election-training/

https://scytl.us/election-worker-training/

Anonymous ID: 5bc7bc Nov. 9, 2020, 1:42 p.m. No.11563115   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3126 >>3165 >>3230 >>3321 >>3339 >>3433 >>3482

Moar on Scytl

 

Scytl was founded in 2001,[1] and grew out of a cryptography research project[2] at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. The name is a reference to the scytale, an ancient cryptographic tool.[3]

 

It became profitable in 2006, and in 2014, it reported 70% annual revenue growth.[4] It bought SOE Software in 2012.[1] It intended to go public in 2016, but delayed the IPO because of poor performance in developing markets and decided to focus on developed country markets as well as on election solutions for non-government customers.[5]

 

In 2017, Scytl reported having 600 employees, of which a third were in Barcelona. In 2016, it divided itself into three companies:[6]

  • the original Scytl Secure Electronic Voting, which develops voting software,

  • Scytl Voting Hardware SL, which develops voting hardware, owned by Scytl and an anonymous Dubai-based investor, and

  • Civiti (formerly OpenSeneca), which focuses on civic participation services.

 

Scytl was funded by venture capital. It raised $9 million in 2006 from investors including Balderton Capital and Nauta Capital, and $104 million in 2014 in multiple funding rounds from investors including Vulcan Capital, Sapphire Ventures, Vy Capital, Adams Street Partners and Industry Ventures.[4]

 

The company's systems have been implemented in numerous countries,[7][8] but problems have cropped up over the years in some of its solutions and voting systems, including those used in Australia, Ecuador, Norway and Switzerland.[9]

 

On 11 May 2020, facing debts of over 75 million euro, Scytl initiated bankruptcy proceedings with a view to sell its business to the U.S. investment fund Sandton Capital.[10] On 2 June 2020, a Spanish court declared Scytl bankrupt and started the process of auctioning off its assets.

 

Vulcan Capital: Luke Sikora from Vulcan sits on Scytl's board (https://www.scytl.com/en/team/directors/luke-sikora/)

→ Luke Sikora has been closely involved in Vulcan’s investments in Alibaba, Avvo, Dataminr, Grab, Intercom, Loft, Magic Leap, ScaleFactor, Scytl, Souq, Spotify, TraceLink, TrueCar and Uber.

→ He also worked at Menlo Park Office of Battery Ventures, where he focused on growth equity and buyout investments in the software and internet space.

→ Vulcan Capital has public investments in Amazon, Cintas, Microsoft, Netflix, Square, and more. (https://capital.vulcan.com/Investments.aspx)

 

Sandton Capital: It has operations worldwide

→ Robert Rice and Rael Nurick are both listed as directors of the company

https://www.corporationwiki.com/search/results?term=sandton%20capital

http://www.sandtoncapital.com/team