Social games are taking off on sites like Facebook. While the games are free, consumers can buy virtual goods in the games such as gifts for a friend or weapons. And they can pay for them with credit cards or by participating in special advertising offers. But those offers are sometimes scams, so gWallet is proposing a way to curb such abuses.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":144036,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,games,","session":"B"}']gWallet claims it has proprietary technology and strict ethical standards that will make social media more palatable to big brands. The company says it works with brands directly as opposed to the current affiliate model, allowing for a single point of accountability and transparency when it comes to making offers to consumers in an appropriate way. It will thus hire its own direct sales force.
Rich LeFurgy, founding chairman of the Interactive Advertising Bureau, which is a watchdog group for the ad industry, is an advisor to gWallet. A couple of weeks ago, working with social networks such as Facebook, rival Offerpal Media also set up a new standards system to make sure its offers are legitimate. The company said it is on the lookout for acquisitions.
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San Francisco-based gWallet raised its new funds from Adams Street Partners, Trinity Ventures, Stanford University and others. It is the third Internet startup by entrepreneur Gurbaksh Chahal, who started ClickAgents at the age of 16 and sold it to ValueClick for $40 million two years later. He then sold behavioral ad network Blue Lithium to Yahoo in October, 2007 for $300 million.
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