Which no-name startup is making a name for itself with Hollywood's anti-piracy police?
It's called Vobile Inc. In reporting a story on the surprising progress in video fingerprinting technology, the company was mentioned time and again by sources--even by rivals--as having a technology that stands at or near the top among the twelve systems that have been tested by the Motion Picture Association of America over the past six months...

Pirate-Proofing Hollywood
But screening companies are making progress. Two-year-old Vobile Inc. in Santa Clara, Calif., did well in the MPAA tests, with technology thatextracts what it calls "video DNA" from a movie. Executives won't say what that DNA is but say it lets them spot even a few seconds of a fingerprinted film. In a demonstration, CEO Yangbin Wang shows how the software identified a fuzzy scene of Walt Disney Co.'s The Jungle Book shot at an angle with a camcorder.

Dave Liu was quoted in this article by Business Week, so he also write something about this deal: Which No-Name Startup is Making a Name for Itself with Hollywood’s Anti-Piracy Police?

The press release VOBILE ANNOUNCES LANDMARK DEPLOYMENT OF VIDEODNA(TM) CONTENT IDENTIFICATION AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEM has been translated into French: Pomoho, le "Youtube chinois", va filtrer ses vidéos.

I also find an blog written at early 2007, which describe us as one of the key players in the competition of Video Fingerprint technology: Video Fingerprinting Overview: Who's Doing What.