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Why blockchain startup Legaler has raised $1.5 million ahead of its ICO

It may have an ICO on the cards, but blockchain startup Legaler has also raised $1.5 million to build its distributed network for the legal industry.
Legaler co-founders Stevie Ghiassi and Mike Hosseini. Source: Supplied.
Legaler co-founders Stevie Ghiassi and Mike Hosseini. Source: Supplied.

It may have an ICO on the cards, but blockchain-for-legal startup Legaler has also raised $1.5 million in funding to build its distribution network for the legal industry.

The funding round was led by MasterNode Ventures and also included Pacific Blue Capital and several private investors, who have not yet been named.

Speaking to StartupSmart, co-founder and chief of Legaler Stevie Ghiassi says the startup is developing a โ€œblockchain-based platform for the legal industryโ€.

Launched last year by Ghiassi and co-founderย Mike Hosseini as a networking tool for lawyers, Legaler now has more than 1,000 law firms signed up in 80 countries.

Ultimately, its flagship app Legaler Aid will match people who canโ€™t afford traditional legal advice with those willing to provide it pro-bono, using a tokenised incentive platform. It will also provide a crowdfunding platform.

Quoting figures from the United Nations, Ghiassi says some four billion people worldwide have little to no access to legal representation. This is more than the two billion that are unbanked and the 3.5 billion that donโ€™t have access to the internet, which are the groups blockchain technologies have typically targeted.

The plan now is to run the โ€œUber for lawโ€, he says, creating a โ€œdedicated blockchain for the legal industryโ€ that will eventually have applications built on top of it.

Just like technology companies are becoming providers of services, Legaler will become โ€œthe worldโ€™s largest legal services provider, through blockchain infrastructureโ€, Ghiassi says.

Legaler originally announced its plans for an ICO back in February this year, with a hard cap of $35 million.

Six months later, despite a general slump in the cryptocurrency space, its still on the cards, but Ghiassi says itโ€™s โ€œsomething weโ€™re trying to find the right time for, with the marketโ€.

The ICO will likely happen towards the end of the year, he says, when Legaler will be pushing Legaler Aid as itโ€™s MVP.

This $1.5 million in funding will be put towards building out the initial product and growing the team, as well as marketing the ICO.

โ€œWeโ€™re not in a rush to try and raise. We want to build out an infrastructure people can use,โ€ Ghiassi says.

โ€œWeโ€™re in this for the long term,โ€ he adds.

While Ghiassi is aware that adoption of blockchain technology in the mainstream will be a slow process, he points out that the sector is essentially based on smart contracts. And thatโ€™s etymology lawyers understand.

At the same time, lawyers are expressing some concern about changes from things like automation and artificial intelligence.

โ€œThereโ€™s a state of flux in the industry,โ€ Ghiassi says, โ€œpeople are looking for new technology that is going to disrupt.โ€

The plan is to eventually build a marketplace, with Legaler adjusting its own offerings and opening up a platform for others to build apps upon, thereby โ€œgiving others a tool to be that disruptionโ€.

At that point, โ€œas opposed to being an operations-heavy company, we will be a blockchain-focused infrastructure companyโ€, he says.

NOW READ:ย Why this un-banked Kiwi crypto startup has relocated to Sydney

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