Lemon launched last year to store all those messy receipts clogging up your wallet. If you buy something in a store and received a paper receipt, you could snap a picture from Lemon’s apps, and send it to the company’s servers. Receipts from online purchases can go directly to Lemon with non-relevant information filtered out. You can then view all your purchases in a secure online dashboard, which shows you how much you spend and where.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":472194,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"entrepreneur,mobile,","session":"B"}']Unlike other digital wallets from Square and PayPal, you can’t use the cards stored in Lemon to make payments at stores. However, Lemon’s wallet is a backup should you ever lose your physical wallet or are too lazy to go find your credit card while shopping online in bed.
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If storing your credit cards, driver’s license, and health insurance card in an app on your phone gives you security nightmares, the company assures that it uses SSL encryption and a bank-level secure PIN to keep your information secure.
Starbucks’ Howard Schultz’s firm Maveron led the $8 million round. Draper Fisher Jurvetson and The Social+Capital Partnership also participated. The cash will go towards boosting Lemon’s new digital wallet.
Lemon is based in Palo Alto and has a team of 21. Its app is available for Android, iOS, and Windows Phone.
Photo: SarahMitroff/VentureBeat
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