Teleport, the decentralized ride-hailing service on Solana, announced Thursday that it is shutting down.
The company admitted it has been unable to sustain operations. It wrote:
“This is not the outcome we had hoped for, but we’re incredibly grateful for this community and everyone who believed in the vision and showed up with enthusiasm. Your support meant everything. Thank you for believing in us.”
Teleport shuts down as users have until February 28 to withdraw funds
The company’s website currently has a message informing visitors about the wind-down process. The app will provide off-ramping support until Feb. 28 so users can receive their remaining stablecoin balances and private keys.
Meanwhile, the firm hopes to post a more detailed analysis of what led to this decision in the future, but for now, we’re focused on an orderly wind-down.
Led by early crypto investor and former Dropbox engineer Paul Bohm, Teleport was launched in 2022 when the Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks (DePIN) projects began to boom. Just as Helium did, Teleport also aimed to integrate blockchain-based incentives into real-world applications.
The company was different from traditional ride-hailing companies like Uber and Lyft since it employed Solana’s blockchain to establish an open and transparent marketplace. Teleport’s Rideshare Protocol was intended to reduce costs for riders and increase earnings for drivers by excluding the middlemen corporations.
Customer acquisition was not traditional but “permissionless marketing,” where users could find drivers and riders and bring them into the network.
Teleport utilized a reward system inspired by Bitcoin’s mining rewards, which rewarded early adopters with Compressed NFTs on Solana.
DEC’s $9 million seed funding couldn’t save Teleport from industry challenges
The Decentralized Engineering Corporation (DEC) that built the app raised $9 million in a seed funding round co-led by Steve Vassallo at Foundation Capital and Thomas Bailey at Road Capital.
However, while its innovative model was built on a sound idea, Teleport failed to gain critical mass and financial health. The ride-sharing industry is competitive, with the existing players keeping their stronghold on the users by having a large user base, regulatory power, and financial backup.
While the blockchain-based incentives were a way of doing things differently, they were not enough to help Teleport navigate through the operational and market challenges that the project faced.
Cryptopolitan Academy: How to Write a Web3 Resume That Lands Interviews – FREE Cheat Sheet
Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/solana-based-uber-rival-teleport-shuts-down/