Koo wants to take on Twitter. Can it succeed?
Koo’s reading is that people across the world including in the US are looking for alternatives and the company wants to leverage this opportunity by placing Koo as a free alternative to Twitter.
Koo’s reading is that people across the world including in the US are looking for alternatives and the company wants to leverage this opportunity by placing Koo as a free alternative to Twitter.
New products, apps, and communities are reversing the overwhelming male gaze of the Internet. That could only be a good thing.
Politiek, a completely bootstrapped social media app, wants to empower citizens by bridging the gap between them and their representatives. Will it succeed?
Koo, which has raised $30 million in its Series B round led by Tiger Global, says it will invest the money in developing new features on the app.
Home-grown microblogging app Koo—which provides non-English speakers a platform to express themselves—is the flavour of the season. But can it compete with Big Tech and other domestic platforms?
In a candid conversation with Fortune India, Koo’s co-founder, Mayank Bidawatka, speaks about the journey, the development of Koo as a product, the tough microblogging space, privacy, and much more.