Finally, there is a start-up that just may become the next gigantic
tech IPO. I mean, on the scale of eBay or Amazon.com
(AMZN Quote) in the 1990s or, more recently, Google .
Don't laugh: It's
BitTorrent.
Yes, I know. There are plenty of obstacles between BitTorrent, the
maker of lightning-fast file-sharing software, and the public markets.
The software is seen as the tool of choice for those pesky music and
movie pirates, its not as intuitive to use as other peer-to-peer
programs, and, like
Napster before it, it risks being sued into
oblivion.
But BitTorrent has been quietly working during the past year to become more palatable to the mainstream. Above all, it's been working with major content companies to show its technology can help replenish their profits, rather than deplete them.
And with YouTube taken out of the running by Google and social
networking sites like Facebook starting to lose the youthful allure they
had even a few months ago, there aren't a lot of strong candidates left.
BitTorrent may be a dark horse, but if it can overcome the hurdles before
it, it's a horse that could deliver remarkable returns in short order.
On Wednesday, according to tech news blogs GigaOm and TechCrunch, BitTorrent
received $25 million in funding in a private investment round led by
Accel Partners (which has backed companies such as
Macromedia and
RealNetworks in the past). Neither the company nor its reported investors have made a formal announcement.