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June 2, 2008 7:33 AM PDT

Pageonce personal assistant opens for business

Posted by Dan Farber
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Pageonce, which bills itself as a personal Internet assistant, has entered its public beta phase. (We covered its February debut here.)

The service lets users aggregate all of their Web accounts from a single dashboard. Users submit their user names and passwords for services, including finance, shopping, utilities, social networks, travel, and e-mail, into a Pageonce master account. After the accounts are activated, Pageonce can let users know how many minutes they have left on their cell phone account, and send notifications about flight itinerary changes, credit limits, friend request, bill payments, and other account activities. Pageonce also provides a proactive function, making it easy for users to monitor their accounts for fraudulent activity. A version of the Pageonce for the iPhone is also in development.

Pageonce provides a dashboard and notifications of changes in accounts.

The utility of Pageonce is obvious, but it requires a level of trust for users to give up their access information to a single Internet service. Pageonce applies military-level security, Pageonce CEO Guy Goldstein told me, with multiple security layers, including 256-bit data encryption, SSL systems, and multiple firewalls. "All the data is encrypted, and we have hired hackers to try to break into our systems," Goldstein said. Financial accounts are read-only, so from the Pageonce site a user's accounts cannot be changed. Goldstein said Pageonce is also looking into token-based security solutions to provide great security assurance to users. Even with all the assurances of security, Pageonce must overcome a trust perception hurdle to gain acceptance.

Prior to the public beta, Pageonce had 20,000 users and 60,000 accounts. The majority of the accounts cover e-mail, financial services, and social networks so far. The company plans to generate revenue from advertising, primarily via customer retention promotions, which represents about half the marketing spend at most consumer companies. Anonymized benchmarking data could also provide another revenue source.

Pageonce was founded by ex-Mercury (sold to Hewlett-Packard for $4.5 billion) executives and is planning a Series A investment round. The company was private funded with $1.5 million in May 2007.

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
by bobboynton June 2, 2008 7:15 PM PDT
You did not mention the aesthetics of pageonce. It is quite attractively designed. And the design makes it very easy to get where you want to go.

When it started it was very 'heavy' on financial relationships, and had very little standard web 2.0 associations. It still looks like it would be best for a traveling business person rather than a 'geek.'
Reply to this comment
by SebDavies June 3, 2008 1:05 PM PDT
Tar for doing this story! Tried it out and its a goood service!
Reply to this comment
by DWdrum June 4, 2008 8:25 AM PDT
It still needs work. I really gave this the once over. I have sent the following feedback to the developers:

Feedback:

1. A refresh all sources button
2. Auto refresh all sources after log in
3. Allow user to move and arrange windows in any order
4. More accurate figures, I found the bank data to be days old
5. Have some windows auto check every minute or two ( ie: eMail )
Reply to this comment
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