docTrackr
docTrackr is a technology company.
Financial History
docTrackr has raised $2.0M across 1 funding round.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has docTrackr raised?
docTrackr has raised $2.0M in total across 1 funding round.
docTrackr is a technology company.
docTrackr has raised $2.0M across 1 funding round.
docTrackr has raised $2.0M in total across 1 funding round.
docTrackr has raised $2.0M in total across 1 funding round.
docTrackr's investors include Baird Capital, Blue Note Ventures, Boston Seed Capital, Capital Factory, Collaborative Seed & Growth Partners, Foundry Group, Stride VC, Techstars, Jennifer Lum, Will Herman.
docTrackr has raised $2.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $2.0M Seed in October 2012.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 1, 2012 | $2.0M Seed | Baird Capital, Blue Note Ventures, Boston Seed Capital, Capital Factory, Collaborative Seed & Growth Partners, Foundry Group, Stride VC, Techstars, Jennifer Lum, Will Herman |
docTrackr was a document security startup that built a cloud-based service for secure sharing, tracking, and controlling access to files like PDFs, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents, even after sharing.[1][2][3][5] It served enterprises and individuals needing to manage permissions, automate security policies, generate audit reports, and revoke access remotely without software installation, solving the problem of document leakage in cloud sharing by providing persistent DRM controls, analytics, and encryption.[1][2][5] The company raised $2.02M from investors including Polaris Partners and Converge before being acquired by Intralinks (now under SS&C) in 2014 for $10M, after which its technology integrated into Intralinks' platform to enhance secure collaboration.[1][3][4]
Founded around 2012-2013 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, docTrackr emerged from a French startup in Le Camping's first batch and gained U.S. traction via TechStars Boston.[3][1] Key executives included Tomer Petrozzo, former head of technology for investment management at Goldman Sachs and CIO at Fidelity Investments, and Mark Feinberg, ex-general manager and SVP of EMC’s Cloud Infrastructure Group, who sold the startup in 2016.[1] The idea addressed gaps in secure file sharing, with early integrations like Box praising its DRM capabilities; it launched with free tiers for PDFs and Office docs, building traction through plug-in-free tracking and revocation features before the Intralinks acquisition marked its pivotal exit.[3][5]
docTrackr rode the early 2010s surge in cloud collaboration amid rising data breach concerns, timing perfectly with tools like Box and Dropbox needing bolted-on DRM to meet enterprise security demands.[3][5] Market forces like regulatory compliance (e.g., privacy laws) and remote work favored its location-agnostic tracking and revocation, influencing the ecosystem by setting a standard for post-sharing control that Intralinks adopted to become a "de facto standard" for secure file sharing.[2][4] Its tech pressured competitors to innovate encryption, with Box even attempting an acquisition bid, accelerating industry-wide adoption of analytics-driven document security.[3]
Post-2014 acquisition by Intralinks (acquired by SS&C), docTrackr operates as an integrated brand within secure collaboration software, with its core tech likely powering ongoing enhancements in auditing and DRM.[1][4] Evolving AI-driven threat detection and zero-trust models will shape its legacy, potentially expanding to multi-modal files amid hybrid work. Its influence endures in enterprise ecosystems, proving early innovators in document security can scale impact through strategic exits, much like how it transformed basic sharing into lifetime control.[2][3]