Social Media

Facebook acquires govt ID authentication startup

Confirm, the Boston-based government ID authentication startup, has been acquired by Facebook for an undisclosed fee. Confirm will now terminate it’s current offerings while its employees will move to Facebook’s main headquarters in Boston.

Confirm makes authentication of a driver’s license or an ID card fast, easy and secure. Its software enables the identification of an individual to be confirmed within minutes to provide authenticity and safety for any transaction requiring remote identity proofing.

The world’s largest social network will now use Confirm’s technology to confirm the identities of its users in a response to users being locked out of their accounts and U.S. lawmakers expressing their concerns about Facebook’s limited ability to know who is buying election related-ads among others.     

On Facebook it has always been fairly simple for users to buy advertisements as it had required no identification confirmation, only a Facebook page and a credit card.

Last year there was a lot of controversy when Facebook claimed that suspected Russian agents had been bribing people to boost Facebook posts in an effort to manipulate the outcome of the 2016 US presidential election. The Kremlin denied the allegations.

“We are excited to welcome the Confirm team to Facebook. Their technology and expertise will support our ongoing efforts to keep our community safe,” commented a Facebook spokesperson in a statement on Tuesday.   

Confirm was founded in 2015 and has grown to possess 42 employees and serve over 750 clients. Many of the company’s clients included Fortune 50 companies such as financial institutions, healthcare providers, insurance carriers, retailers, shared economy companies and on demand service providers. The startup had recently raised 4 million in venture funding.

Confirm made the following announcement on its website: “When we launched Confirm, our mission was to become the market’s trusted identity origination platform for which other multi-factor verification services can build upon. Now, we’re ready to take the next step on our journey with Facebook. However, in the meantime this means all of our current digital ID authentication software offerings will be wound down.”

Markus Skagbrant

Markus is a Swede who is passionate about travel, sports, and all things tech.

View Comments

  • I am not sure whether it is the right step to be taken! However, anyway, I like the idea with an ID authentication software! Sounds nice!

  • I am sure after look for the how do i get my computer in windows 10 one think always would be in your mind which is however I can be done it because lots of difficulty you have to face after visit here.

Recent Posts

GAN, Tec de Monterrey partnership highlights cross-border startup ecosystem building in Latin America amid trade dispute

Despite recent tensions between the United States government and Latin American countries over migration and…

3 days ago

This founder started out with US $5K to his name. Now, he owns a multi-million-dollar global business

Meet Nitin Seth, the Co-Founder and CEO of Screen Magic (SMS Magic), a messaging leader…

4 days ago

Building smarter: AI, the ultimate tool transforming an old-age industry

In this Brains Byte Back, we sit down with Hari Vasudevan, founder and CEO of…

4 days ago

When AI Goes Rogue: 8 Lessons from Implementing LLMs in the Healthcare Industry that Could Save the Future

By Santosh Shevade, Principal Data Consultant at Gramener – A Straive company All pharmaceutical companies…

5 days ago

Digital Public Infrastructure will enable public, private entities to control your access to essential goods, services & mobility

Digital Public Infrastructure is a top-down agenda coming from unelected globalists, bureaucrats, and their partners…

2 weeks ago

Open Source Claims to Be a Meritocracy—So Why Are Companies Buying Their Way In?

Imagine that you are a maintainer of a widely used open source project relied upon…

2 weeks ago