Phunware, Inc. is an Austin, Texas based mobile application, location tracking, and advertising software company founded in 2009. It is traded on NASDAQ as PHUN. Phunware also has offices in Irvine, California, San Diego, California, and Miami, Florida. Its executives are Alan Knitowski, Randall Crowder, Luan Dang, and Matt Aune. Knitowski's 2019 total compensation was $1.9 million, with $1 million for Crowder, $1.2 million for Dang, $1.4 million for Aune. The company has acquired Odyssey, Simplikate, Digby, Tapit! and GoTV. Their customers in 2019 include Fox Networks Group, HID Global, American Made Media Consultants, Presidio Networked Solutions, and MD Anderson. Previous customers included Warner Brothers, NASCAR, NFL, and NBC Sports. Applications that send data to Phunware servers include the campus map for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and GunDealio, an app for gun sales from Gun Talk Media. Phunware's location tracking was used, for instance, to target 2018 Democratic ads at participants in the anti-Trump 2017 Women's March in DC. Phunware provides campaign data, including "users' daily digital trail", to the Trump reelection campaign, through a $3 million contract awarded by Brad Parscale's American Made Media Consultants. They also built the Trump/Pence reelection app for the campaign in November 2019. On September 26, 2017, Phunware sued Uber Technologies for $3 million in unpaid services. The suit was still open as of early 2020. Phunware performed a reverse merger with Stellar Acquisitions III, a special-purpose acquisition company in December 2018, placing Phunware on NASDAQ. The company's non-GAAP adjusted net revenues were stated at $19 million in 2019, down from $22.5 million in 2018. The GAAP gross revenue was $19 million in 2019 and $30.8 million in 2018. Fox Networks Group was 50% of the company's 2019 sales, up from 42% the previous year. Phunware's active Fox contract was completed in 2019, meaning the sales could go to zero. The company had 93 employees at the end of 2019, after reducing their workforce by 44. In March 2020 the company furloughed 37 people. On April 10, 2020, Phunware received $6.1 million in federally backed small business loans from JP Morgan Chase as part of the Paycheck Protection Program. The company received scrutiny over this loan for its connections to Trump and Fox News. In defense, Crowder said companies that didn't apply "aren't doing their fiduciary duty", and said "Banks aren't loaning to unprofitable tech companies. There is no access to capital". A week later on April 17, 2020, the company received a delisting notice from NASDAQ.