This startup just raised $7 million, led by Google, to authenticate people based on their typing style

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TypingDNA, a four-year-old, 18-person startup that was founded in Bucharest, Romania and more recently moved its headquarters to Brooklyn,
New York, has closed on $7 million in Series A funding for something interesting: AI-driven technology that it says can recognize people
based on the way they type, both on their laptops and mobile devices.We yesterday discovered an SEC filing that showed the company — which
graduated from Techstars NYC in late 2018 and early last year closed on €1.3 million in seed funding — had so far raised $5.25 million
toward that goal
We’ve since connected with the company’s co-founder and CEO, Raul Popa, who confirms the entire amount has been raised.Gradient
Ventures, which is Google’s nearly three-year-old, AI-focused venture group, led the round; it was joined by the company’s previous
backers, including Techstars Ventures and GapMinder Venture Partners, a venture outfit based in Amsterdam.Typing biometrics — the detailed
timing information that describes exactly when each key is pressed and released as a way to identify the unique person at the keyboard —
is apparently not brand new
A two-year-old, PC World article says research in the field dates back 20 years
It also says that inaccuracies have kept the technology from being used as a widespread way to authenticate individuals
TypingDNA meanwhile asserts that the typing pattern recognition technology it has developed has an accuracy rate of between 99% and
99.9%.According to Popa, TypingDNA is currently working with banks, financial and payment apps, online education platforms, enterprise apps,
consumer apps and government apps that are concerned with identity and fraud prevention.On the education front, for example, it helps
organizations ensure they’re giving the right students credit for the work they receive.Worth noting: its API is open to anyone —
especially developers — looking to integrate the technology into their products and apps
In fact, asked how the company will use its new round, Popa says the plan involves “focusing on developers more, coming up with typing
biometrics-based products that can easily be integrated to solve various use cases, and helping banks and fintechs where regulation asks for
biometrics as a second factor.”As for what TypingDNA is doing that wasn’t previously possible, Popa says his team doesn’t need a huge
body of work to draw conclusions, that they’re “able to look at very short and few samples of text in order to authenticate people with
great accuracy.”The mobile tech, he says, “needs even less data than on desktop, because we also look at other sensors in the
device.”From an AI point of view, TypingDNA is apparently combining pattern recognition, anomaly detection and what Popa calls one-shot
learning techniques — some of which are “completely novel,” he says
Indeed, if all goes as planned, it eventually also could be applied to other technologies, as well to improve binary classification quality
when few training samples are used.