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Indian social network Koo to shut down

July 3, 2024
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The Indian social media platform Koo, which sought to compete with Elon Musk’s X, is shutting down after acquisition talks with Dailyhunt fell through. Despite securing over $60 million in funding from prominent investors including Tiger Global and Accel, Koo faced significant challenges in expanding its user base and generating revenue over the past year.

TechCrunch exclusively reported in February that Koo was engaging with Dailyhunt, an internet media startup valued at $5 billion, for a potential sale. The talks didn’t materialize into a deal, Koo founders said Wednesday.

“We explored partnerships with multiple larger internet companies, conglomerates and media houses but these talks didn’t yield the outcome we wanted,” Koo founders Aprameya Radhakrishna and Mayank Bidawatka wrote in a LinkedIn post Wednesday. “Most of them didn’t want to deal with user generated content and the wild nature of a social media company.”

Koo sought to win users by giving them an X-like platform where they could express themselves in multiple local languages. Koo initially gained popularity in India during a period of tension between Twitter and the Indian government. This conflict emerged when Twitter challenged the government’s opaque requests for content removal.

Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey revealed last year that the Indian government had threatened to shut down the social network in the country and “raid the homes of its employees. (The Indian government refuted Dorsey’s allegations and a top minister at the time said Dorsey was attempting to “brush out that very dubious period of Twitter’s history.)

Koo took advantage of the situation and positioned itself as a more compliant alternative, pledging to adhere to local regulations. This approach attracted numerous high-profile Indian politicians to the platform, though nearly none from the opposition party. The startup also had also expanded its eponymous app to Brazil. It initially gained traction in India amid Twitter’s fallout with New Delhi

But a prolonged funding winter, which forced startups globally to scale their revenue and improve their finances, “got the better of us,” Koo founders said.

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