Tevel Angel Club

Tevel_logoI've recently volunteered to join the executive committee of a non-profit organization called Tevel. Tevel is the first angel club established in the US, focusing exclusively on bringing US angel investors together with young Israeli startups.

Tevel was founded by Oren Fuerst and Oren Heiman (more here). What got me interested in this project is Oren's (Fuerst...) description of why they started Tevel:

They floated the idea last summer, around the time of the war in Lebanon. Being Israelies in NY, they were approached by friends asking how they can help the community in Israel in a 'real' way (ie - not by giving a donation to a random organization without ever knowing if/how that helped anyone specific). Oren, coming from a business background, thought the best way to contribute would be by helping the economy, and the best way he knew was by supporting entrepreneurs in the beginning of their ventures.

With Tevel the idea is to introduce young and promising Israeli entrepreneurs to American investors. While the hope is that the investments yield investors great returns, the primary goal is to help support the entrepreneurs and through that help support the Israeli economy.

We're now looking for investors who are interested in joining the club, and entrepreneurs looking for early seed investments. If you're interested, shoot me an email (yaron [at] galai [dot] com) or go directly to the Tevel website - www.tevel.org

Israel parade, Made in Japan

I have no idea what the context of this video is, but as an Israeli this is absolutely wild to see... As with cars and electronics, the Japanese make stuff that's superior to anyone else, and that seems to include parades now...

(thanks Ouriel!)

Top-10 Israeli web 2.0 companies

alarm:clock has a nice overview of their top-10 Israeli web 2.0 startups. I particularly agree with one of the runner-ups... ;-)

TWS 2007 - Israel's DEMO'ish conference

Tws2007_logo the.co.ils, one of the finest of Israel's tech blogs, has announced an upcoming startup event called TWS2007 (Hebrew only...). In Yaron's words (not me, Orenstein):

"The idea is to Identify and present up to 10 small startups with great technology and strong teams, who are seeking for funds and on the other hand, allow all other web entrepreneurs to mingle and approach the VCs and angles with no formal barriers. It is a "pro bono" event with the sole purpose of promoting the Dot Com industry in Israel."

They've also launched a TWS group on LinkedIn for folks involved in the Israeli startup world, which you can join here.

TWS2007 will be held in the Interdisciplinary Center (Merkaz Bentchumi) in Herzelyia, on April 10th. I'm not sure I'll be in the right side of the world on that date, but if I do make it - see you there!

Israel's exports, part 6

Israel's high tech export machine[1] has been firing on all cylinders in the past two months:

Nice batch - cool!

[1] My theory - there are countries that export products, countries that export oil and those that export agricultural goods. Israel builds and then exports high-tech companies.

Israel’s Hottest Web 2.0 Start-ups

IsraelwebtourGoing to the Web2.0 Conference? On November 7th (first day of the conference), Mike Arrington will be moderating a showcase of 15 of the hottest web 2.0 startups from Israel in Palo Alto. Registration for this is a steal at $100. Full details about this event are here and on the IsraelWebTour blog.

See you there!

Israel's exports, part 5

Regular readers of this blog are familiar with the theory: There are countries that export oil, countries that export electronic goods, there are those that export agricultural produce, etc. Israel builds and then exports high-tech companies.

The pace of roughly one exported company per week has slowed down a bit over the summer/war months, but the export business is still solid:

  • Mobilitec exported to Lucent for ~$75M
  • M-Systems exported to SanDisk for $1.35B (pending all sorts of legal crap)
  • Gteko exported to Microsoft for $120M

Previous editions here, here, here and here.

* Not a company export per-se, but a notable mention goes to QBI which licensed a biotech drug to Pfizer for a reported "hundreds of millions of $$'s"

On profiling

[UPDATED: Great post on this topic by Tom Evslin here]

Following last week's arrest of the terrorists planning to explode airplanes mid-air by mixing explosive liquids, the Homeland Security Office released these new boarding regulations:

NO LIQUIDS OR GELS OF ANY KIND WILL BE PERMITTED IN CARRY ON BAGGAGE. SUCH ITEMS MUST BE IN CHECKED BAGGAGE. This includes all beverages, shampoo, sun tan lotion, creams, tooth paste, hair gel, and other items of similar consistency.

Ugh... I guess the US Homeland Security uses the old cliche about 'preventing the previous attack instead of the next one' as its founding principle.

You see, the problem is not the bad stuff, but rather the bad guys.

For example (and I know this may come as a big surprise to members of the law enforcement forces here in the US) the risk to planes is not inherently in this...:

Shoe_2 ...or in this: Toothpaste_1

...but rather in this:

Richard_reid

I simply can't understand the 'no profiling allowed' policy. What it essentially means is that collectively we're willing to sacrifice the whole lives of hundreds of innocent people, just to prevent a couple of minutes of inconvenience or embarrassment to those unnecessarily profiled[1]. Huh?!?!

In Ben Gurion airport in Israel, security seems to be based primarily on profiling. Between the time you approach the airport and the time you board the plane, you are "casually" spoken to probably 5-6 times by security personnel (not necessarily in uniform). Asking a seemingly casual question and observing the person's response, stress levels, accents, behavior, etc, etc has 100000000x higher chances of catching a plotting terrorist than does asking millions of people to dispose of their toothpaste and take off their shoes.

Sure - once in a while, an innocent person with a combination of accent, skin tone, behavior, whatever will be mistakingly delayed for screening for 10 minutes. Sure, it's annoying when you're picked out of the crowd just for being an Arab, black, Jew, young, Muslim, single, Pakistani, whatever.

But that's all it is. It's annoying, it wastes 10 minutes, it might be embarrassing. That's it. Put that in contrast to a plane loaded with 400 people crashing into a building.

Any claims that profiling is racism or prejudice are ridiculous because profiling isn't about discriminating anyone eventually, but rather about making everyone more secure by focusing the effort on higher risk groups[2].

Furthermore, trying to prevent the previous terror attack makes life real easy for  terrorists because they have a simple play book they need to avoid. "Hmmm.., OK... so I can't hide my explosives in my shoes, and I should avoid liquid explosives... but it should be fine to hide some gun powder in a capsules looking like Advil, and try to explode the emergency exit mid-flight". Hey - even Richard Reid could figure that one out! (and I hear that intelligence was not exactly his sweet spot). It's a whole different story for a stressed-out, sweaty, 25-year old Pakistani male to disguise the fact that he's a stressed-out, sweaty, 25-year old Pakistani old male...

If you try to stop exclusively bad stuff (vs. trying to find the bad people), you are bound to spend shitloads of money trying to prevent yesterday's attacks while practically ignoring tomorrow's. 

So stop wasting time on wanding her for 20 minutes (even if, god forbid, she attempts to board the plane with shoes and toothpaste!!):
Old_woman_sm


...and pick up your head to look for folks like him:Richard_reid

Worst case - if he turns out to be an innocent artist with high anxiety, a sweating problem and strange shoes, apologize for the 5 minutes of his time wasted and move on.

 

 



[1] Not to mention the humongous price we pay for hoards of people and machinery we buy to scan people who a 3rd grader would know beyond doubt are innocent.

[2] Here's a possible solution to this problem: Provide special "no-passenger-screened" planes on which you board all those folks who resist being screened for profiling reasons, together with all the hypocritical politicians who pass laws preventing profiling, and with basically anyone else who prefers to fly those planes. This will both guarantee that no one ever feels discriminated by profiling, AND will reduce terror attacks on planes flying reasonable human beings to practically zero.

Israel & Hezbollah - the sad truth, part 2

Yesterday I posted an amusing comic strip about the reality of fighting a terrorist group like the Hizbollah. This morning's chilling story published by Ynet shows how sadly true this is:

Six days before he was killed in an Israel Air Force bombing of a United Nations post in southern Lebanon, Canadian observer Major Paeta Hess-von Kruendener sent an email to his former commander in the Canadian army, in which he said that Hizbullah fighters were "running around" near the UN post struck by the Israel Defense Forces and that they were using the post as a sort of "shield" against Israel's strikes.

The former commander, Major-General Lewis MacKenzie, who served as a UN commander in Bosnia, spoke about the email in a Canadian radio show. He said that Hess-von Kruendener wrote that the IDF strikes near the post had "not been deliberate targeting, but rather due to tactical necessity."

"That would mean Hizbullah was purposely setting up near the UN post," he added. "It's a tactic."

Israel & Hezbollah - the sad truth

When seeing the reports on TV about the war going on in Israel and Lebanon, it's easy to forget who the bad guys are in this story. I thought this comic strip does a good job summarizing the shit that's going on...:

Israel_hez

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