Home Check Out My New Favorite Browser Plug-In, Built by a Venture Capital Firm

Check Out My New Favorite Browser Plug-In, Built by a Venture Capital Firm

Tech investors Polaris Ventures built and released today a really handy new Chrome browser extension they call Polaris Insights. Click it and you’ll be shown Crunchbase (tech financial), LinkedIn (employment) and Quora (general Q&A) information about the company behind whatever website you’re visiting. It will be of particular interest to journalists, investors and others who take a deep interest in the websites of various businesses but it’s a great example of bigger things, of course. Specifically, of the kind of value add that can be built by using distributed social media data to provide context to a given document. It’s pretty hot.

I wish that the extension showed Google News and Google Blogsearch results where available, but maybe that’s the extension someone else will build. Tweets about the company with 5 or more retweets? The list of possibilities is long when you’re talking about automatically collated, web-based, ambient information. I wish the extension queried Hoovers when no Crunchbase data is available. I wish I had a feature like this in an Augmented Reality brain implant I could invoke wherever I go offline. (Just kidding.)

Imagine a time when the only ways we could learn about a company was through its own advertisements or from centralized sources like Consumer Reports. The web is so different. A plug-in like this makes it as easy as snapping your fingers to see information about a company assembled by wiki (in the case of Crunchbase), by co-worker validation (LinkedIn) or by vote-driven Q&A (Quora). It’s a wild world we live in.

For more enthusiasm about this software and for info about its creation, check out TechCrunch. That’s where I found out about it.

About ReadWrite’s Editorial Process

The ReadWrite Editorial policy involves closely monitoring the gambling and blockchain industries for major developments, new product and brand launches, game releases and other newsworthy events. Editors assign relevant stories to in-house staff writers with expertise in each particular topic area. Before publication, articles go through a rigorous round of editing for accuracy, clarity, and to ensure adherence to ReadWrite's style guidelines.