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§ Private Profile · Mountain View
Loopt, based in Silicon-Valley and backed by leading venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and New Enterprise Associates, has created an interoperable social...
Loopt, based in Silicon-Valley and backed by leading venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and New Enterprise Associates, has created an interoperable social-mapping service that allows individuals to use their location to discover the real world around them – enabling them to find and enjoy the people, places, and events that mean the most right here and now using their mobile phones.
With Loopt, individuals will always know who’s around, what to do, or where to go
Loopt has raised $17.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Key people at Loopt.
Loopt was founded in 2005 by Nick Sivo (Founder) and Sam Altman (Founder) and Alok Deshpande (Co-Founder).
Loopt has raised $17.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Loopt was founded in 2005 by Nick Sivo (Founder) and Sam Altman (Founder) and Alok Deshpande (Co-Founder).
Loopt has raised $17.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Loopt's investors include Bolt, Xfund.
Key people at Loopt.
Loopt has raised $17.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $12.0M Series B in July 2007.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 1, 2007 | $12M Series B | — | Bolt, Xfund | Announced |
| Nov 1, 2005 | $5M Series A | — | Bolt, Xfund | Announced |
Loopt was a pioneering location-based social networking company based in Silicon Valley, backed by prominent venture capital firms including Sequoia Capital and New Enterprise Associates. It developed a mobile app that allowed users to share their real-time location selectively with friends, answering the fundamental question, "Where are my friends right now?" Loopt served smartphone users seeking to connect socially through location sharing and local information, also integrating features like local micro-reviews and user-driven local deals. Although it did not achieve mass-market dominance, Loopt was influential in shaping early mobile location services and social networking, laying groundwork for features now common in apps like Google Maps and Snapchat[1][2].
Loopt was co-founded in 2005 by Sam Altman, Nick Sivo, and Alok Deshpande while Altman was a sophomore at Stanford University. The idea emerged from Altman’s curiosity about the real-time whereabouts of his friends, leading to the creation of a location-sharing app. The company was part of the first batch of startups funded by Y Combinator, receiving initial seed funding of $6,000 per founder. Early traction included growing a user base of over five million people and launching innovative features such as "Qs," local micro-reviews, and "u-Deals," a platform for users to request and promote local discounts. Despite its innovation, Loopt struggled with user adoption due to privacy concerns and was eventually acquired by Green Dot Corporation in 2012 for $43.4 million[1][2][3].
Loopt rode the early wave of mobile location-based services, a trend that gained momentum with the proliferation of smartphones and GPS technology. Its timing was critical as it predated widespread adoption of location sharing in mainstream social media. Market forces such as increasing smartphone penetration, the rise of app stores, and growing consumer interest in hyper-local information favored Loopt’s concept. Although it did not dominate commercially, Loopt’s innovations influenced the broader ecosystem by demonstrating the potential and challenges of real-time location sharing, privacy management, and integrating social networking with local business engagement[1][2].
While Loopt itself was acquired and ceased independent operations, its legacy persists in the location-sharing features now standard in many social and mapping apps. The company’s early exploration of privacy controls and user-driven local content presaged current trends in personalized, location-aware services. For founders like Sam Altman, Loopt was a foundational experience that propelled them into influential roles shaping Silicon Valley’s startup ecosystem. Looking forward, the principles Loopt championed—real-time location sharing balanced with privacy, and blending social interaction with local commerce—remain central to evolving mobile and social technologies, especially as augmented reality and hyper-local services expand.