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Why More And More Americans Are Abandoning Their US Citizenship

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In November, millions of Americans will trudge to their local polling places to cast votes in the hope of improving their lives here in the USA. Between now and then, a few hundred Americans will vote with their feet in the hope of improving their lives outside the USA.

Last year, nearly 1,800 Americans surrendered their citizenship. In a nation of 300 million folks, 1,800 émigrés is hardly a rush for the exits. But the recent trend is, nevertheless, intriguing.

renouncing citizenship

As recently as four years ago, only 200 people checked out of America for good. Back then, surrendering US citizenship would have seemed as unthinkable to most Americans as declining a free vacation to Hawaii to pay for a vacation in Newark. It would have seemed as crazy as:

  • …giving away a brand new Aston Martin Zagato to buy a used Buick Le Sabre.
  • …surrendering your membership at Augusta National in order to start playing Augusta Municipal.
  • …trading away an original Van Gogh painting for an original Peter Max poster
  • …refusing a date with Mila Kunis in order to watch re-runs of her animated counterpart, Meg Griffin, in Family Guy.
  • …abandoning a beachfront mansion to live in your car.

Giving up citizenship would have seemed as incomprehensible as…go ahead, create your own simile.

Bottom line: Surrendering US citizen was absolutely unthinkable. But not anymore. Now it is “thinkable,” albeit still relatively rare. The absolute numbers are still tiny, but the trend conveys a very large message: Discontent is on the rise.

Increasingly, the used LeSabres and Augusta Municipals are winning the contest. And probably not because they are so alluring, but rather because the “Aston Martin” is starting to sputter like a used moped and “Augusta National’s” fairways are starting to sprout more weeds than its deep rough.

To be clear, your California editor remains an American citizen with a valid American passport…and no pending petitions in any American embassies to surrender his citizenship. His observations, therefore, are not personal…but they are heartfelt.

When Americans begin abandoning the “Land of the Free” to seek greater freedom elsewhere, it is time to sit up and pay attention; it is time ask yourself, “Why? Why are they leaving? What’s wrong?”

Is it just a “tax thing” or are other forces in play? Is it because folks don’t like:

  • …drones watching their every move while the mow their lawns or skinny dip in the pool with their spouses.
  • …enduring a political “ethic” that increasingly declares, “What’s yours is mine and, if not, it ought to be”…
  • …suffering financially for behaving responsibly, while Wall Street bankers reap rewards for behaving irresponsibly.
  • …cohabitating with an NSA that builds mega-spy centers in the Utah desert to eavesdrop on their phone calls with Granny or their steamy chat messages with a significant other.
  • …living in a land that increasingly seems to be saying to would-be democracies around the globe: “Do you need a Constitution? Why not take ours? We’re not using it.” [Thanks, Jay Leno].

Who knows the exact reason why 1,800 Americans chose to leave last year — nine times as many as left four years earlier. Certainly, each one of them had their reasons. But like a corporate insider that sells his own stock, there’s one thing you know for certain about his motives: he is not selling because he believes the stock will go up. Maybe he doesn’t believe the stock will go down, but no one sells a stock they believe will go up.

Likewise, Americans who bail on their country may not think things are going to get any worse any time soon, but they clearly do not believe things are going to get better. So far, the pitter-patter of footsteps heading for the exits is barely a murmur…but the murmur is getting louder.

Eric Fry
for The Daily Reckoning

Why More and More Americans are Abandoning Their US Citizenship originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, published by Agora Financial provides over 400,000 global readers economic news, market analysis, and contrarian investment ideas. Recently Agora Financial released a video titled "What Causes Gas Price to Increase?".

 

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Here's The First Slide Deck 'The Facebook' Used To Pitch Ads In 2004 (FB)

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Here's an unusual Facebook advertising artifact.

Jack Marshall at Digiday got his hands on the original slides that first Facebook investor, and first CFO, Eduardo Saverin used to pitch Facebook in 2004 to advertisers.

The site was only two months old. It had 70,000 users and was at 20 colleges.

Saverin was pushing IAB standard ad units rather than social ads and "was asking for ad commitments of around $80,000 for targeted display ad placements that would reach 'thousands' of users."

Here's one of the slides, so you can get a taste of Saverin's pitch. You can check out the full deck at Digiday >Facebook ads slide 2004

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Facebook Cofounder Eduardo Saverin Is Turning His Attention To Car Service Startups

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eduardo saverin

Eduardo Saverin, most famous for cofounding Facebook before getting booted out by Mark Zuckerberg, now has his sights set on transportation startups.

On Tuesday a Texas-based startup called Silvercar announced it has raised a $14 million Series B round led by Saverin and Velos Partners, the Wall Street Journal reported. Saverin will join Silvercar's board as well.

"We’re seeing sweeping changes in how personal transportation is being packaged and consumed, and Silvercar is doing for car rental what Uber and Lyft did for livery," Saverin said in a statement to Mashable. "In fact, like Uber, there’s so much potential beyond the first product. I believe that the most exciting things Silvercar will do are yet to come and will be borne out of their consumer-friendly mobile app and powerful technology platform."

Unlike Uber and Lyft, which have been duking it out in price-gauging wars that have left some Uber drivers upset, Silvercar isn't trying to make its rentals cheaper. Instead, Silvercar finances its own fleet of Audi A4s. It's available at eight U.S. airports now, and will be in 10 by the end of the year, according to Techcrunch.

Saverin, who renounced his U.S. citizenship and moved to Singapore two years ago,  also backed a peer-to-peer airport car rental service called FlightCar. He contributed to its $13.5 million Series A round of fundraising earlier in September. 

SEE ALSO: UBER DRIVERS PROTEST: 'You Can't Make A Living Working Only For Uber'

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The richest billionaires under 35 and how they got their money

Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin is making a bid for a startup that just went bankrupt

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CHICAGO (Reuters) - Jumio, an online identification verification company whose clients include United Airlines and Airbnb, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for its U.S. business and initiated the sale of assets, according to court documents.

The company, based in Palo Alto, California, said in a court filing on Monday that it has struggled to raise funding for its operations following government investigations into financial irregularities and stock sales by its former management team.

"This has left Jumio with few alternatives," Jumio Chief Executive Stephen Stuut said in the court filing in Delaware. As a result, he said Jumio had decided to sell most of its assets under a Chapter 11 restructuring process.

"Despite some of the challenges Jumio's leadership team inherited, our underlying business remains exceptionally strong," Stuut said.

The company said it has received a stalking-horse bid from Jumio Acquisition LLC, a new entity formed by Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin. The bid was valued at about $22.6 million, Jumio said.

The stalking-horse agreement opens the door for other interested parties to make a bid. Jumio said it had received initial interest from 32 potential bidders.

Saverin has also offered $3.7 million in financing to provide liquidity needed to see the company through its bankruptcy proceedings.

Jumio listed assets of between $1 million and $10 million and liabilities of up to $50 million in its court filing.

The case is in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 16-10682.

(Reporting by Tracy Rucinski; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

SEE ALSO: http://www.businessinsider.com/first-twitter-and-odeo-employees-and-where-they-are-now-2016-3

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Here's where Facebook's first 20 employees are now (FB)

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Early Facebook execs

Who were the people behind Facebook when it was just a startup? And where are they now?

Only two of Facebook's first 20 employees still work at the company — and you can probably guess one of them.

Most left during the social network's early days to work at other tech companies or start their own. Several have become successful investors at large VC firms. Out of Facebook's first 20 employees, only two were women. Many are now absurdly rich, following Facebook's IPO in 2012.

Here's where Facebook's first 20 employees are now:

SEE ALSO: The fabulous life and career of 33-year-old Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg

SEE ALSO: 33 photos of Facebook's rise from a Harvard dorm room to world domination

Dustin Moskovitz, Facebook's first CTO, was Mark Zuckerberg's roommate. The two dropped out of Harvard together to move to California and work on Facebook.

Employed by Facebook: February 2004 - November 2009

Position:Cofounder

Where he is now: He's the cofounder and CEO at enterprise software company Asana. He also cofounded Good Ventures, a philanthropic firm with the mission "to help humanity thrive." He has a net worth of nearly $12 billion, according to Forbes.



Chris Hughes cofounded Facebook and served as the site's first spokesman. He later coordinated all social networking aspects of Obama's 2008 campaign.

Employed by Facebook: February 2004

Position at Facebook:Cofounder

Where he is now: After working on Obama's 2008 campaign, Hughes became executive director of Jumo, a startup that tried to utilize social media to change the world. In 2012, he purchased a majority stake in The New Republic and became its executive chairman and editor-in-chief. He put the magazine up for sale in 2016 after it failed to become profitable.

Hughes is now co-chair of the Economic Security Project, a group that wants to make universal basic income a reality in the U.S.



Eduardo Saverin was a Facebook co-founder and its first CFO. He famously sued Mark Zuckerberg and the two reached a settlement.

Employed by Facebook: February 2004

Position:Cofounder

Where he is now: After winning a legal battle with Facebook which let him retain his cofounder status, Saverin began angel investing in startups like Qwiki and Chris Hughes' Jumo. In 2011, Saverin (who was born in Brazil) renounced his U.S. citizenship and moved to Singapore, likely because of the taxes he'd have to pay following Facebook's public offering.

He says he has no hard feelings when it comes to Facebook or Mark Zuckerberg, who ousted him from the company shortly after its launch. Saverin has a net worth of roughly $8.7 billion, according to Forbes.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How these 23 entrepreneurs became the lesser known co-founders of the biggest tech companies in the world

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Steve Jobs and Bill Gates

When a tech company reaches a certain level of success, the names of the founders often become synonymous with the brand they create. At least, that's the case with founders who are the "face" of the company.

Still, we tend to forget that Steve Jobs, Travis Kalanick, and Bill Gates, didn't create Apple, Uber, and Microsoft alone. 

On the contrary, these companies might not exist in the same capacity if it weren't for the co-founders who fly under the radar because they chose to steer clear of the spotlight, or because the pressures brought on by the early years of a quickly-growing company pushed them away. Many of these same people have moved on to create even more multi-million dollar ideas, while others left for a life of philanthropy, or pursued another passion.

Here are the lesser known co-founders who helped create some of the biggest tech companies you definitely know:

SEE ALSO: RED's $1,200 smartphone is coming this summer — take a look at all its futuristic technologies

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak

Steve Wozniak (a.k.a. "Woz") doesn't really need an introduction, but for those who aren't well-versed in the history of Apple: Wozniak designed and built the first Apple computer, Apple 1.

He was working at Hewlett-Packard (HP) at the time, where he tried to share his computer design. When he was denied multiple times, Steve Jobs — who was working there for the summer — suggested the pair try to sell a fully-assembled version of the design to a third party. 

As Apple grew, Wozniak felt the emphasis on marketing hindered him as an engineer, and he left for good in 1985, but he's still the sole inventor on multiple Apple patents, including the "Microcomputer for use with video display."

The same year he left Apple, Wozniak finished earning his degree from UC Berkeley (under the fake name "Rocky Raccoon Clark") and founded a company that built the first programmable universal remote control.

Wozniak has since co-founded two more companies, multiple non-profits including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the Silicon Valley Comic Con convention. He's also on multiple company boards, and remains on the official Apple employee list. He's also an Apple shareholder.



Apple co-founder Ronald Wayne

Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak formed "Apple Computer" in 1976 alongside their administrative supervisor, Ronald Wayne, who was 42 at the time.

Wayne drew up the first logo and the partnership agreement that gave him 10% of the company, but only lasted for 12 days before deciding he couldn't keep up with the pace the company was going.

Wayne sold his shares for $800 — a decision he claims he doesn't regret. Today, he holds dozens of patents but not enough capital to profit from them, and sells gold, rare coins, and stamps from his home in Nevada.



Uber co-founder Garett Camp

Even after stepping down as the company's CEO, Travis Kalanick seems to personify Uber as a company — but Kalanick wasn't the one to come up with the original idea for Uber.

"Garrett [Camp] is the guy who invented that s--t," Kalanick once said at an early Uber event in San Francisco. "I just want to clap and hug him at the same time."

Camp described what we know as "ride-sharing" to Kalanick when they attended the 2008 LeWeb conference: He wanted to create a convenient luxury car service that didn't cost a thousand dollars to use. Kalanick was on board, and UberCab started later that year.

The initial prototype was created by Camp and two of his friends from graduate school. Kalanick was brought on as a "mega advisor," and wasn't even CEO until 2010 when he replaced then-CEO Ryan Graves.

Camp earned his first fortune when he sold the web-recommendation tool StumbleUpon to eBay in 2007; he still serves as chairman for both StumbleUpon and Uber. He's also an investor and creator of startup studio Expa, which helps new founders build their own products.

Camp doesn't seem to be involved with the day-to-day at activities at Uber, although he did publish this blog post in light of all of the negative attention that Uber was getting last year.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

12 former Facebook insiders who ditched the company and are now outspoken critics (FB)

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mark zuckerberg chris hughes 2004

  • Not every Facebook employee leaves with a high opinion of the social media giant or its CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
  • Cofounder Chris Hughes thinks the company is too powerful and should be broken up. Founding President Sean Parker worries what Facebook is doing to kids' brains. A former strategic partner manager says Facebook has failed its black employees and users.
  • The founders of Whatsapp, Instagram, and Oculus — some of Facebook's biggest acquisitions since 2012 — have all left the company.
  • We rounded up the parting musings of 12 former Facebook employees.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook has seen its share of talent come and go in its 15 year history, and not always with great things to say. Some former employees have looked back at their time at the social media giant and questioned the value and impact that their work has had on society.

Cofounder Chris Hughes made headlines earlier this year by publicly calling for Facebook to be broken up, becoming the highest profile ex-Facebooker to turn on the company. Of course, there are plenty of insiders who have left Facebook who continue to support it. 

Here are 12 former Facebook employees who have criticized Facebook or CEO Mark Zuckerberg since leaving.

SEE ALSO: Here's why the internet is obsessed with 'number neighbors,' a viral trend where people text phone numbers one digit away from their own

12. Chris Hughes — Cofounder

Chris Hughes, Zuckerberg's Harvard roommate, cofounded Facebook. He left in the company in 2007. In 2019, he says the company is too powerful and is calling for it to be broken up. 

"I've been critical of a lot of the company's decisions over the past year, and (Mark) knows that," Hughes said in an interview with CNN Business in May 2019. "It's not personal beef, but it is personal."

"I've been friends with Mark for fifteen plus years, I dont know if we'll be friends on the other side of this piece," Hughes said in the CNN interview. 

In July 2019, The New York Times reported that Hughes had been in meetings with the FTC, DOJ, and state attorneys about a potential antitrust case against Facebook.

 

Sources: New York Times, New York Times, CNN Business

 



11. Palmer Luckey — Oculus founder

Palmer Luckey founded his VR company Oculus in 2012, which Facebook acquired in 2014 for about $2 billion. By 2017, he was out, following a Daily Beast report in 2016 that Luckey was "putting money behind an unofficial Donald Trump group dedicated to 's---posting' and circulating internet memes maligning Hillary Clinton."

In October 2018, Luckey told CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin, "it wasn't my choice to leave." When Zuckerberg testified before congress in April 2018, he said Luckey's departure was not related to politics, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Sources: Wall Street Journal, TechCrunch, The Daily Beast, Facebook, CNBC



10. Sean Parker — Founding president

The Napster cofounder joined Facebook as its founding president in 2004. He was arrested — but not charged — for cocaine possession in 2005. According to Vanity Fair, the arrest worried Facebook investors, and consequently "with much anguish, (Parker) agreed to depart."

In November 2017, Parker criticized Facebook at an Axios event, saying "God only knows what it's doing to our children's brains."

 

Sources: Axios, Business Insider, Vanity Fair



9. Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger — Instagram cofounders

Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger launched Instagram in 2010, and Facebook acquired it for $1 billion in 2012. In 2018, both cofounders left Facebook.

According to The New York Times, disagreements about changes to the service and staffing led to their decision to leave. The Times also reported that the founders weren't happy about the level of control Zuckerberg had begun to assert over Instagram.

At the Wired 25 conference after his departure, Systrom said "there are no hard feelings" towards Facebook, but "No one ever leaves a job because everything's awesome, right?" according to The Verge.

Source: The Verge, New York Times, Business Insider, The New York Times



8. Alex Stamos — Former chief information security officer

Alex Stamos served as Facebook's chief information security officer from 2015 to 2018. According to The New York Times, prior to his departure Stamos "advocated more disclosure around Russian interference of the platform" but colleagues disagreed — his tasks were delegated out consequently. Stamos also reportedly clashed with COO Sheryl Sandberg, once blindsiding her at a board meeting where he began speaking about Russian intelligence operations.

"The truth is there is a bit of a Game of Thrones culture among the executives," Stamos said in a February 2019 interview with CNN. "One of the problems about having a really tight-knit set of people making all these decisions ... if you keep the — the same people in the same places, it's just very difficult to admit you were wrong, right?"

In May 2019, Stamos said Zuckerberg wields too much power and therefore should step down as Facebook's CEO.

Sources: Business Insider, Business Insider, New York Times, CNN



7. Mark Luckie — Former strategic partner manager for global influencers

Mark Luckie, who worked at Facebook from 2017 to 2018, circulated a memo to Facebook employees globally when he left the company and then posted it on Facebook. It's opening line read: "Facebook has a black people problem." Luckie went on to detail how Facebook has failed its black employees and users. He wrote that underrepresented groups are systematically excluded from communication and that racial discrimination at Facebook is real.

Facebook's 2019 diversity report showed that only 3.8% of Facebook employees identified as black, with only 1.5% of technical employees identifying as black.

"We want to fully support all employees when there are issues reported and when there may be micro-behaviors that add up," A Facebook spokesperson wrote to Business Insider around the time Luckie published his memo. "We are going to keep doing all we can to be a truly inclusive company."

Sources: LinkedIn, Facebook, Facebook, Business Insider



6. Chamath Palihapitiya — Former VP

Chamath Palihapitiya worked at Facebook from 2008 to 2011, serving as VP of platform and monetization, and then VP of user growth, mobile & international. 

In November 2017, Palihapitiya criticized Facebook at a talk at Stanford's Graduate School of Business, saying he felt "tremendous guilt" about the effect of social media on society. "In the back, deep, deep recess of our mind, we kind of knew something bad could happen." 

"Chamath has not been at Facebook for over 6 years," Facebook wrote in a response statement. "Facebook was a very different company back then, and as we have grown, we have realized how our responsibilities have grown too."

Palihapitiya consequently backpedaled, writing "I genuinely believe that Facebook is a force for good in the world" in a Facebook post.

Sources: Facebook, Business Insider, Business Insider, Business Insider, LinkedIn



5. Justin Rosenstein — Former engineering manager

Justin Rosenstein worked as an engineering manager at Facebook from 2007 to 2008, during which time he helped develop the Like button. After leaving Facebook, he cofounded digital project management platform Asana in 2008. 

Rosenstein told The Guardian in 2017 that he restricts his own use of social media these days, saying, "Everyone is distracted...all of the time." 

Sources: Business Insider, LinkedIn, Guardian



4. Leah Pearlman — Former product manager

Leah Pearlman also worked on creating Facebook's Like button; in retrospect, she had concerns about the validation feedback loop she created.

In a 2017 interview with Vice, Pearlman said, "You know that episode of Black Mirror, that one where everyone is obsessed with likes? When I saw that I suddenly felt terrified of becoming those people, as well as thinking I'd created that environment for everyone else."

Source: Vice, Business Insider



3. Brian Acton — WhatsApp cofounder

Brian Acton left Facebook in September 2017, three years after it acquired his messaging platform WhatsApp for $19 billion. According to Forbes, Acton's pro-privacy and anti-ads stance for WhatsApp caused friction with Zuckerberg and Facebook.

In February 2018, Wired reported that Acton was working with WhatsApp competitor Signal (which has end-to-end encryption), investing $50 million.

In March 2018, he called for users to #deletefacebook as the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal came to light. 

Sources: Wired, Forbes



2. Jan Koum —WhatsApp cofounder

Jan Koum followed his cofounder Brian Acton out the door of Facebook. In April 2018, Koum announced his intent to leave the company. The Washington Post reported that Koum made the decision "after clashing with (WhatsApp's) parent, Facebook, over the popular messaging service's strategy and Facebook's attempts to use its personal data and weaken its encryption." 

Koum posted on Facebook announcing his departure; Zuckerberg commented, saying "I'm grateful for everything you've done to help connect the world, and for everything you've taught me, including about encryption."

Sources: Washington Post, Verge, Facebook



1. Eduardo Saverin — Cofounder

Zuckerberg's Harvard classmate Eduardo Saverin was the cofounder of Facebook. He managed the business side of Facebook until 2005, when Zuckerberg boxed him out by creating a new Delaware corporation to acquire Facebook's old Florida LLC, distribute new shares to everybody, and leave Saverin out.

Zuckerberg wrote an email to his lawyer asking, "Is there a way to do this without making it painfully apparent to him that he's being diluted to 10%?" about Saverin.

What followed were lawsuits from Facebook and Saverin, Saverin approaching the Winklevoss twins, and Saverin approaching author Ben Mezrich about the book that would become Accidental Billionaires, which would eventually be made into the film The Social Network by David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin in 2010. 

When Saverin and Facebook's lawsuits were settled, Saverin signed an NDA and ceased communication with the press. In a 2012 interview with Veja, a Brazilian magazine, Saverin said, "I have only good things to say about Mark, there are no hard feelings between us." In a 2019 interview with Forbes, Saverin said, "I'm incredibly proud of what Mark has done, to build an institution of its size and value. He'll work hard to get things right."

Sources: Business Insider, Business Insider, Business Insider, Forbes




The richest people in Singapore, ranked

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zhang yong singapore

Singapore, one of the most expensive cities in the world, is home to an estimated 44 billionaires.

These ultra-wealthy individuals range from real-estate magnates and private investors to hot pot billionaires and even the cofounder of Facebook.

Singapore's richest person is Zhang Yong, a 50-year-old restaurateur who's worth $16.4 billion and chairs the popular Sichuan hot pot chain Haidilao, which has locations in China, the US, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore, according to Forbes' Real-Time Billionaires list. His wife, Shu Ping, the director of the company, is also on Singapore's billionaires list, with a net worth of $3.3 billion.

Here are Singapore's richest people, who are worth a combined $95.7 billion.

SEE ALSO: What it's like living as a billionaire in Singapore, the most expensive city in the world, where wealthy residents are worth a combined $1 trillion and limited land makes owning a house the ultimate 'status symbol'

DON'T MISS: Wealthy parents in Singapore are buying penthouses for their kids as taxes rise, and it mirrors a change in luxury real estate happening on the other side of the world

T15. Zhao Tao

Net worth: $2.0 billion

Age: 55

Source of wealth: pharmaceuticals



T15. Sam Goi

Net worth: $2.0 billion

Age: 72

Source of wealth: frozen foods



T15. Asok Kumar Hiranandani

Net worth: $2.0 billion

Age: 66

Source of wealth: real estate



14. Peter Lim

Net worth: $2.1 billion

Age: 67

Source of wealth: investments



T12. Kuok Khoon Hong

Net worth: $2.9 billion

Age: 71

Source of wealth: palm oil



T12. Richard Chandler

Net worth: $2.9 billion

Age: 61

Source of wealth: investments



11. Raj Kumar and Kishin RK

Net worth: $3.1 billion

Age: 66

Source of wealth: real estate



T9. Choo Chong Ngen

Net worth: $3.3 billion

Age: 67

Source of wealth: hotels



T9. Shu Ping

Net worth: $3.3 billion

Age: unknown

Source of wealth: restaurants



8. Jason Chang

Net worth: $3.4 billion

Age: 76

Source of wealth: electronics



7. Kwek Leng Beng

Net worth: $3.7 billion

Age: 80

Source of wealth: real estate



6. Kwee brothers

Net worth: $6.5 billion

Age: unknown

Source of wealth: real estate



5. Wee Cho Yaw

Net worth: $7.1 billion

Age: 91

Source of wealth: banking



4. Goh Cheng Liang

Net worth: $10.5 billion

Age: 93

Source of wealth: paints



3. Robert and Philip Ng

Net worth: $12.2 billion

Age: unknown

Source of wealth: real estate



2. Eduardo Saverin

Net worth: $12.3 billion

Age: 38

Source of wealth: Facebook



1. Zhang Yong

Net worth: $16.4 billion

Age: 50

Source of wealth: restaurants



The 28 youngest billionaires in tech, from Stripe's founders to the owner of TikTok

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Bobby Murphy Evan Spiegel

  • Many of the world's youngest billionaires hail from the tech industry. 
  • Snap's Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy are 29 and 31, respectively, as are Stripe's John and Patrick Collison. 
  • Not every tech billionaire is young — the world's two richest people, Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates, are in their 50s or 60s. And Oracle's Larry Ellison was 49 when he reached billionaire status.
  • Still, companies like Airbnb, TikTok-parent ByteDance, and social networking behemoth Facebook are run by millennials. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

It pays to be young in tech. 

While there are currently plenty of over-50 and over-60 billionaires who hail from the tech world — Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates chief among them — there are also dozens of newly minted millennial billionaires. Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy (29 and 31, respectively) became billionaires in their mid-20s, and Spiegel is one of only a few self-made billionaires under the age of 30. 

And Mark Zuckerberg became the world's youngest billionaire at age 23 (though he's since been unseated by Kylie Jenner). He's still among one of the youngest, richest people in the world. 

That's not to say youth is a requirement in the tech world. Oracle founder Larry Ellison, who's currently worth over $58 billion, was 49 when he reached billionaire status. Elon Musk and Meg Whitman were in their 40s as well. 

But these days, some of tech's biggest or most exciting companies are run by billionaires in their 20s and 30s. Thanks to Forbes' annual billionaires list, we've identified the 28 youngest billionaires in tech. 

SEE ALSO: From Facebook to Tesla, here are the lesser-known cofounders of some of the biggest tech companies in the world

Tobi Lutke

Age: 39

Net worth: $1.6 billion

What he does: Tobi Lutke is the founder and CEO of ecommerce technology company Shopify. 



Peter Szulczewski

Age: 39

Net worth: $1.4 billion

What he does: Peter Szulczewski is the cofounder and CEO of ecommerce platform Wish.



Sachin Bansal

Age: 38

Net worth: $1 billion

What he does: Sachin Bansal is cofounder of Flipkart, India's biggest ecommerce site. 



Joe Gebbia

Age: 38

Net worth: $3.7 billion

What he does: Joe Gebbia is cofounder and chief product officer of short-term home rental company Airbnb.



Brian Chesky

Age: 38

Net worth: $3.7 billion

What he does: Brian Chesky is cofounder and CEO of short-term home rental company Airbnb.



Evan Sharp

Age: 38

Net worth: $1 billion

What he does: Evan Sharp is cofounder and chief creative officer of inspiration and trend discovery site Pinterest.



Ben Silbermann

Age: 38

Net worth: $1.6 billion

What he does: Ben Silbermann is cofounder and CEO of inspiration and trend discovery site Pinterest.



Eduardo Saverin

Age: 38

Net worth: $9.7 billion

What he does: Eduardo Saverin cofounded Facebook along with Mark Zuckerberg.



Su Hua

Age: 37 or 38

Net worth: $2.9 billion

What he does: Su Hua is the cofounder and CEO of Kuaishou, a Chinese GIF and video-sharing app. 



Binny Bansal

Age: 37 or 38

Net worth: $1 billion

What he does: Binny Bansal is cofounder of Flipkart, India's biggest ecommerce site. He was CEO of Flipkart Group until his resignation in November 2018 after allegations of "serious personal misconduct."



Cheng Wei

Age: 37

Net worth: $1.2 billion

What he does: Cheng Wei is the founder and CEO of Chinese ride-hailing platform Didi Chuxing.



Brian Armstrong

Age: 37

Net worth: $1.3 billion

What he does: Brian Armstrong is the cofounder and CEO of cryptocurrency trading platform Coinbase.



Daniel Ek

Age: 37

Net worth: $2.2 billion

What he does: Daniel Ek is the cofounder and CEO of music-streaming company Spotify. 



Drew Houston

Age: 37

Net worth: $2.3 billion

What he does: Drew Houston is the cofounder and CEO of file-sharing service Dropbox.



Ryan Graves

Age: 37

Net worth: $1.6 billion

What he does: Ryan Graves was the first full-time employee and first CEO of Uber. He's currently the CEO of investment firm Saltwater Capital. 



Nathan Blecharczyk

Age: 37

Net worth: $3.7 billion

What he does: Nathan Blecharczyk is the cofounder and chief strategy officer at short-term home rental company Airbnb.



Zhang Yiming

Age: 36

Net worth: $16.2 billion

What he does: Zhang Yiming is the chairman of ByteDance, a Chinese content company behind the short-form video app TikTok. 



Bill Liu

Age: 36

Net worth: $1.7 billion

What he does: Bill Liu is the CEO and chairman of Royole, which makes flexible displays and sensors that are used in devices like foldable phones.



Kevin Systrom

Age: 36

Net worth: $1.4 billion

What he does: Kevin Systrom is the cofounder and former CEO of photo-sharing app Instagram, which was acquired by Facebook in 2012.



Mark Zuckerberg

Age: 35

Net worth: $62.3 billion

What he does: Mark Zuckerberg is the cofounder and CEO of social networking company Facebook.



Dustin Moskovitz

Age: 35

Net worth: $11.1 billion

What he does: Dustin Moskovitz cofounded Facebook along with Mark Zuckerberg. He left Facebook to cofound the workplace management company Asana, where he is CEO. 



Pavel Durov

Age: 35

Net worth: $2.7 billion

What he does: Pavel Durov is the founder of messaging app Telegram. He also created VK, the biggest social networking app in Russia. 



Chris Wanstrath

Age: 34

Net worth: $2.2 billion

What he does: Chris Wanstrath is the cofounder and former CEO of GitHub, a social network for software developers that was acquired by Microsoft.



Jihan Wu

Age: 34

Net worth: $1.5 billion

What he does: Jihan Wu is the cofounder and chairman of Bitmain Technologies, the largest cryptocurrency mining company in China. 



Bobby Murphy

Age: 31

Net worth: $2.1 billion

What he does: Bobby Murphy is cofounder and chief technology officer of Snap, the social media and camera company that makes Snapchat. 



Patrick Collison

Age: 31

Net worth: $2.1 billion

What he does: Patrick Collison — along with his brother, John — founded payments company Stripe. He currently serves as the company's CEO.



Evan Spiegel

Age: 29

Net worth: $2.1 billion

What he does: Evan Spiegel is cofounder and CEO of Snap, the social media and camera company that makes Snapchat. 



John Collison

Age: 29

Net worth: $2.1 billion

What he does: John Collison — along with his brother, Patrick — founded payments company Stripe. He currently serves as the company's president. 



A VC fund set up by billionaire Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin just closed a $820 million fund to invest in startups

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  • B Capital, the investment fund set up by Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin and Raj Ganguly formerly of Bain Capital, has closed $820 million in new funding to invest in growth-stage startups.
  • With a portfolio of nearly 30 companies in Asia, Europe, and the United States, this new fund brings the total assets under management by the firm to $1.44 billion. Some of the fund's initial investments include scooter company Bird and Singaporean delivery firm Ninja Van. 
  • "In a recessionary period the opportunities are rampant and it's just an incredible moment," Karen Appleton Page, general partner at B Capital told Business Insider in an interview. "Events like Covid have happened but startups are going to keep going they won't sit on the sidelines. They've really sharpened their thinking on some different areas."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. 

B Capital, a venture capital fund set up by Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin and Raj Ganguly formerly of Bain Capital, has closed $820 million vehicle to invest in growth-stage startups.

The fund wants to help companies across enterprise, fintech, health, and mobility at the Series B to D stage.

The fresh fund takes the group's available capital to $1.44 billion. B Capital has more than 30 companies in its portfolio across Europe, Asia, and North America since its founding in 2015. Some of the fund's initial investments include scooter company Bird and Singaporean delivery firm Ninja Van. 

One of the fund's LPs is management consultancy firm Boston Consulting Group. The two share a deeper relationship with BCG introducing startups to its corporate network and assisting with talent acquisition and scaling needs. 

"The way we partner with BCG has grown and deepened over time," Karen Appleton Page, general partner at B Capital, told Business Insider in an interview. "There's a mutual fascination there. We bring the newest tech to their eyes, they provide a way of bringing that tech down the path."

B Capital closed its latest fund prior to the COVID-19 pandemic hitting full stride. 

"First and foremost, we were super lucky on timing and we had great stories to tell from fund 1," Appleton Page said. "We are bringing in new members which helps us to tell a great story to prospective LPs plus our investment thesis makes us a compelling firm."

The fund will write checks between $25 million and $60 million. The team can write earlier, smaller checks and bigger, later checks (up to $100 million) for the right opportunities, Page added. COVID-19 has accelerated many of the trends that B Capital wants to be a part of too. The explosion of digital information and new infrastructure to cope with the pandemic has forced companies to work in different ways and B Capital wants to work with them. 

"In a recessionary period the opportunities are rampant and it's just an incredible moment,"  Page continued.

"Events like COVID-19 have happened, but startups are going to keep going they won't sit on the sidelines. They've really sharpened their thinking on some different areas."

SEE ALSO: Here's an exclusive look at the pitch deck VR events startup Teooh used to raise $2 million from General Catalyst after growing more than 2000% during COVID-19

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Pathologists debunk 13 coronavirus myths

The Latin American startup Yalochat just raised $15 million for its Salesforce and ServiceNow-competitor that lets users chat with customers over WhatsApp

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Yalochat founder and CEO Javier Mata

  • On Thursday, the customer management and messaging startup Yalochat announced $15 million in fresh funding led by B Capital Group, which was cofounded by Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin.
  • Yalochat is taking on the likes of Salesforce and ServiceNow by helping companies manage customers through messaging apps like WhatsApp.
  • Yalochat focuses on emerging markets like Latin America and Asia, and it plans to use its funding for global expansion.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Mexican startup Yalochat just scored a new round of funding for its mission to take on companies like ServiceNow and Salesforce with a completely different way of managing customers. 

Yalochat builds a customer relationship management (CRM) platform that helps businesses use chat apps like WhatsApp to manage sales operations and customer service, and it focuses on emerging markets like Latin America and Asia. On Thursday, it announced a $15 million funding round led by B Capital Group — which was cofounded by Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin — with participation from Sierra Ventures. 

This is B Capital's first investment in Latin America, where Saverin is from. Yalochat has raised a total of $25 million, but declined to share its valuation. 

Founder and CEO Javier Mata came up with the idea because of how incredibly popular WhatsApp and similar messaging apps are in Latin America and Asia: Why not help companies use those apps to facilitate interactions with their customers? 

Yalochat has won over customers like Coca-Cola, Amazon, Pepsi, Domino's, and Walmart, and can help all these large companies sell products to mom-and-pop shops that may not have established websites or apps.

"We believe that is a simpler model," Mata told Business Insider."It has worked very well for companies that worked with us to run the most critical operations on messaging apps," 

Taking on Salesforce and ServiceNow

Mata says while customer relationship management has long been led by companies like ServiceNow and Salesforce, their software is built with salespeople in mind, instead of the customers that those salespeople are actually selling to. By building on top of messaging apps, Yalochat is meeting 

"As we build this company, we see that this is a new way of operating on top of messaging," Mata said. "We take the user perspective and not the technology perspective as one of the key things that allowed us to go further than our competitors. We managed to understand that ultimately it needed to be easy for users to use in order for this to work out."

Yalochat saw a 650% increase in messages on its app during the coronavirus crisis, and Mata theorized that Yalochat's usage continued to grow because it became clear to companies that they needed to make their business digital in order to stay running. 

And with Yalochat, they don't need to download a brand new app, but can simply use the messaging apps they already have. 

"Now that the dust has settled, you can see what types of companies are growing," Mata said. "That ultimately allowed us to get the funding."

'Everyone thought we were crazy'

Yalochat originally launched in Mexico City, and eventually expanded to other markets worldwide. Mata says in the beginning, "everyone thought we were crazy" to launch in emerging markets, as most major enterprise software companies come out of the US or Europe.

However, he says ultimately, it paid off. With the funding, Yalochat plans to expand globally and make its platform available to more non-developers. Today, Yalochat has offices across North America, Latin America, India, and more.

Mata says to raise funding, Yalochat mapped out the types of investors it wanted and connected with investors in its network. He was especially looking for investors that believe successful companies can be built out of anywhere. 

"They believe not all companies need to come out of Silicon Valley to be successful," Mata said. "We want to inspire companies in Latin America and India that companies can be built out of these markets and impact the lives of many people around the world."

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at rmchan@businessinsider.com, Signal at 646.376.6106, Telegram at @rosaliechan, or Twitter DM at @rosaliechan17. (PR pitches by email only, please.) Other types of secure messaging available upon request. 

SEE ALSO: Intercom, a $1.3 billion startup backed by Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey, just hired a CFO who says the company is 'near profitability' as it eyes an IPO

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What it's like inside North Korea's controversial restaurant chain

'The Social Network,' a fictionalized version of Facebook's founding story, is 10 years old. Here's where the people behind the characters are now.

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SEE ALSO: Mark Zuckerberg spent almost $60 million on 2 waterfront estates in Tahoe last winter. Here's a look at the 10 properties he owns across the US, from a modest Palo Alto home to a Hawaiian plantation.

It's been 10 years since actor Jesse Eisenberg appeared on movie screens as Mark Zuckerberg in a dramatized version of Facebook's founding story in the movie "The Social Network."

The two-hour-long David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin modern classic holds a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and has raked in close to $100 million in US box office earnings. 

"Mr. Fincher and Mr. Sorkin offer up a creation story for the digital age and something of a morality tale, one driven by desire, marked by triumph, tainted by betrayal and inspired by the new gospel: the geek shall inherit the earth,"film critic Manohla Dargis wrote for The New York Times in 2010

While the movie has entertained many over the last decade and earned more than a few fans, one person in particular has remained unimpressed — Mark Zuckerberg. 

 



In a 2014 town hall with Facebook employees that was livestreamed to his page, Zuckerberg said he had "blocked" the movie out and that, in reality, his life was much less glamorous than the events depicted in the movie.

"The Social Network" mainly follows the journey of Zuckerberg, his Harvard best friend Eduardo Saverin, and Napster cofounder Sean Parker as they build the social media giant — first, in Harvard dorms in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and later from a house in Palo Alto, California. It goes from being "The Facebook" to, simply, Facebook. The movie is based on Ben Mezrich's 2009 book "The Accidental Billionaires."

As Alyssa Bereznak recently recounted in a profile for The Ringer, the publisher of the novel told Brad Stone of the New York Times in 2009 that "this is not reportage. It is big, juicy fun." 

 



The closing frame of the movie, an extreme close-up of Eisenberg's face, said Zuckerberg was the youngest billionaire in the world. In the decade since, he has become the fourth-richest person in the world overall, with an estimated net worth of $99.2 billion.

Bloomberg estimates that Zuckerberg is worth $99.2 billion and has gained $20.9 billion in wealth year to date. 

A decade ago, the closing scene noted that Facebook had 500 million members in 207 countries and was valued at $25 billion.

As of the second quarter of 2020, Facebook has 2.7 billion monthly users, per Statista, and it's currently valued at $759.6 billion



This massive growth over the last decade, for both Zuckerberg and the company, didn't come without hiccups and controversies, including instances of misuse of user data and the spread of fake news on the platform.

In 2018, Zuckerberg testified before Congress about news reports that political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica had misused user data to target voters ahead of the 2016 US presidential elections. 

The Federal Trade Commission fined Facebook $5 billion in 2019 over user privacy violations.

It was the largest penalty ever imposed on a company for violating consumers' privacy and almost 20 times greater than any previous privacy or data security penalty worldwide, per the FTC, as well as one of the largest penalties ever given out by the US government. The same month, Facebook reported $2.6 billion in net income for its most recent quarter, which would have been even higher without a $2 billion legal expense related to its settlement with the FTC.



Zuckerberg also went back to Harvard and got his degree, albeit an honorary one.

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Mark Zuckerberg is married to Priscilla Chan, a pediatrician, and the two live in Palo Alto, California, with their daughters, Max and August. They also own properties in Lake Tahoe and Hawaii. 



Eduardo Saverin, played by actor Andrew Garfield, is shown in the movie as the company's CFO in its early days before getting ousted by Zuckerberg and Sean Parker in a dramatic confrontation.

In 2010, Saverin wrote an op-ed for CNBC commenting on the film. "The movie was clearly intended to be entertainment and not a fact-based documentary," he said. 

Two years later, he told Brazilian publication Veja: "Facebook wasn't built out of a Harvard dorm window. And I would never throw a laptop at someone like it appears in the movie. Not even at Mark,"Forbes translated.



Saverin, who was born in Brazil, gave up his US citizenship in 2012 ahead of Facebook going public, and currently lives in Singapore, where he is one of the richest people.

Saverin has an estimated net worth of $14.1 billion, per Forbes. He's now a venture capitalist but most of his wealth comes from his stake in Facebook. 

He founded B Capital in 2016, a venture capital firm which invests in late-stage tech firms, according to Forbes.

He is one of the richest people in Singapore and is married to Elaine Andriejanssen, who works in finance. The couple has one child. 



Actor and singer Justin Timberlake played entrepreneur and Napster cofounder Sean Parker — a suave party boy who quickly charms Zuckerberg in the movie and joins the team.

Parker cofounded music-focused file sharing software Napster as a teenager and was Facebook's founding president at 24

Parker didn't appreciate his portrayal in the film. Specifically, he didn't enjoy a scene where Garfield, as Saverin, and Timberlake, as Parker, have a heated confrontation.

"I consider Eduardo a friend of mine, and I'm one of the few people at Facebook who still interacts with Eduardo,"he said at an event in 2011."This guy in the movie is a morally reprehensible human being."

 



As of October 2020, Parker was worth $2.7 billion, per Forbes. Most of his substantial wealth comes from his time at Facebook.

Parker has gone on to become a venture capitalist. He invested in music streaming app Spotify in 2010, his Forbes profile notes. "The Social Network" was released the same year. 

He owns an impressive real estate portfolio with multimillion-dollar properties in Los Angeles and New York, Business Insider's Avery Hartman previously wrote.

Parker is also generous with his fortune and frequently donates money to various causes. In 2015, he spent $600 million to launch The Parker Foundation. Based in San Francisco, it focuses on the life sciences, public health, civic engagement, and the arts. He also founded the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy in 2016 and the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy & Asthma Research in 2014. 

Parker and his wife, Alexandra, have two children and are based in Los Angeles.

He was a supporter of Democratic VP nominee Kamala Harris' previous bids for attorney general, senate, and president. 



Parker is openly critical of Facebook.

In 2017, he called it a "social-validation feedback loop."

"It literally changes your relationship with society, with each other. It probably interferes with productivity in weird ways. God only knows what it's doing to our children's brains," Parker said.

 



Actor Armie Hammer played both Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, with the help of special effects and a body double. The identical twin brothers had a combined net worth of $1.45 billion in June 2019.

The Winklevoss twins sued Zuckerberg in 2004, stating that he stole the idea of Facebook from them; they eventually settled for $65 million.

They have since gone on to build an extensive fortune through trading in cryptocurrency. In 2015, Tyler and Cameron founded Gemini, a cryptocurrency exchange company. Tyler serves as the CEO. In June 2019, Bloomberg reported that the twins had a combined net worth of $1.45 billion after the price of bitcoin surged by 22% in one day. 

 



According to reports in the Financial Times, the twins have had conversations with Facebook about cryptocurrency.

Hannah Murphy and Philip Stafford reported for the Financial Times in 2019 that "a secretive unit of the social media company" was working on developing a cryptocurrency that Facebook users can use beyond the social platform and had consulted with Gemini and Coinbase. A spokesperson for Facebook told CNBC that the reports were "speculative."



PayPal and Palantir cofounder Peter Thiel, played by Wallace Langham, was one of Facebook's earliest investors and makes a brief appearance in the movie.

John Shinal reported for CNBC that Thiel invested half a million dollars in Facebook in 2004 and owned 2.5% of the company when it went public in 2012. He sold large chunks of his shares at various points in 2012, 2017, and 2020. His most recent sale left him with only about $2 million worth of shares in the company, per Bloomberg.

Thiel, a libertarian, supported President Trump in 2016 and spoke at the 2016 Republican National Convention

The Wall Street Journal reported in December 2019 that Thiel was responsible for Facebook's controversial decision to accept political ads and not fact-check them. Thiel, The Journal reported, is said to have asked Zuckerberg "not to bow to public pressure." Twitter, on the other hand, has a far stricter policy for political ads.

Palantir, Thiel's secretive big data and surveillance company, went public on September 30, 2020, opening trading at a $17 billion valuation



Divya Narendra, played by Max Minghella, runs SumZero — an online community for professional investors.

Narendra joined the suit against Mark Zuckerberg by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss in 2004 before eventually settling.

Tyler and Cameron invested $1 million in SumZero in 2012. 

According to his LinkedIn profile, after graduating from Harvard with a degree in applied mathematics, Narendra attended Northwestern University, where he got degrees in law and accounting and finance. 



Dustin Moskovitz, who helped launched Facebook and is credited as one of its cofounders, left the company in 2008 and is currently worth $16.3 billion.

Forbes notes that most of Moskovitz's wealth comes from his 2% stake in Facebook

Moskovitz cofounded office organizational platform Asana in 2008 and has been the CEO of the company since. Asana was worth $1.5 billion in November 2018 and reported revenue of $142.6 million in the 2020 fiscal year, per Forbes.  

Asana went public on September 30, 2020, and as of October 2 has a market capitalization of $4 billion

"It wasn't buzzy like a social network, or conceptually ambitious like rockets or artificial intelligence. But even hotshot space companies and disease-fighting nonprofits need to coordinate staff. Asana, which the avid yoga enthusiasts named for a Sanskrit word meaning alignment, could help them all,"said Forbes' Alex Konrad about the app. Thiel, Parker, and Zuckerberg all invested seed money. 



Chris Hughes, another cofounder, was estimated to be worth $430 million in 2016. He was also previously the publisher and editor in chief of The New Republic and more recently emerged as a vocal critic of Facebook.

In 2012, Hughes took over the majority of The New Republic, per Forbes. He sold the publication in 2016. His time leading the magazine was marked by a decline in traffic and a wave of staff departures

Also in 2012, Hughes married Sean Eldridge, the political director of Freedom to Marry, an organization dedicated to winning marriage for same-sex couples; Eldridge unsuccessfully ran for a seat in New York's 19th congressional district in 2014.

More recently, in May 2019, Hughes wrote an op-ed for The New York Times entitled "It's time to break up Facebook."

"Mark is a good, kind person. But I'm angry that his focus on growth led him to sacrifice security and civility for clicks. I'm disappointed in myself and the early Facebook team for not thinking more about how the News Feed algorithm could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders. And I'm worried that Mark has surrounded himself with a team that reinforces his beliefs instead of challenging them," he said.



EXCLUSIVE: How Mark Zuckerberg booted his co-founder out of the company

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Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook co-founder, Eduardo Saverin, no longer works at Facebook.

He hasn't since 2005, when CEO Mark Zuckerberg diluted Saverin's stake in Facebook and then booted him from the company.

Saverin's exit from Facebook was the central plot of "The Social Network."

Maybe you remember this scene?

 

"The Social Network" is a work of fiction, of course. But it's based on a true story.

This is that story.

This is the story of how Saverin got so angry at Zuckerberg—how, from Saverin's perspective, Zuckerberg screwed him out of a huge chunk of Facebook stock.

It's also the story of how Zuckerberg solved an early problem at Facebook, one that could have potentially prevented the company from becoming the global behemoth it is today.

The story is sourced from people involved in the founding year of Facebook, people close to Facebook, and documents viewed by Business Insider.  It is an update to a previous story of ours, which included previously unpublished emails and instant messages between Mark Zuckerberg and early Facebook colleagues and confidants. This new version includes new material: Previously unpublished email correspondence between Zuckerberg and Facebook's early lawyers.

Eduardo Saverin"A sucker born every day."

In late 2003, Harvard sophomore Mark Zuckerberg asked a Harvard student named Eduardo Saverin, a junior, to deposit $15,000 in a bank account that would be accessible to both of them. The money, Mark promised, would go toward the servers needed to host a site that Mark wanted to develop. The site would be called TheFacebook.com. Eduardo agreed.

Why did Zuckerberg choose Saverin to be his first business partner?

Zuckerberg, Facebook, and Saverin declined interview requests for this story, but we can infer some of Zuckerberg's thinking from instant messages he wrote during the time.

In one IM to a friend, Zuckerberg described his new partner, Saverin, as the "head of the investment society." Saverin was rich, Zuckerberg went on to say, because "apparently insider trading isn't illegal in Brazil." 

Zuckerberg also partnered with Saverin because Saverin gave the impression he knew something about business. Saverin was the kind of guy who wore suits to class at Harvard, and he left people—including Zuckerberg—with the impression that he was connected to the Brazilian mafia.

In another IM conversation, this one from January 8, 2004, Mark described the arrangement this way:

Zuckerberg: Eduardo is paying for my servers.

Friend: A sucker born every day.

Zuckerberg: Nah, he thinks it will make money.

Friend: What do you think?

Zuckerberg: Well I don't know business stuff

Zuckerberg: I'm content to make something cool.

So Zuckerberg appears to have approached Saverin because Saverin had money and a vision for how to make more of it. Zuckerberg, meanwhile, wanted to "make something cool."

With Saverin's money paying for the servers, TheFacebook.com went live in February 2004. It was an instant sensation at Harvard. Students from other schools quickly clamored for the site's expansion, and Mark and his colleagues obliged.

By April, the site was doing so well that Zuckerberg, Saverin, and a third Harvard sophomore named Dustin Muskovitz formed The Facebook as a limited-liability company (LLC) under Florida law.  Two months later, on June 10, 2004, a Harvard commencement speaker mentioned the amazing popularity of thefacebook.com. 

It was the high point in the relationship between the cofounders. Things quickly went south from there.


Eduardo Saverin"I maintain that he fucked himself"

Six months after thefacebook.com launched, as the summer of 2004 began, Zuckerberg and Moskovitz moved to Palo Alto, California where they planned to work on TheFacebook.com in a rented house. Saverin went to New York for an internship at Lehman Brothers.

According to instant messages from this period, before Zuckerberg left for the West Coast, he asked Saverin to work on three things: "to set up the company, get funding, and make a business model."

Almost immediately after the move, the relationship between cofounders began to fray.

At first, it was just a cultural divide. One awkward IM exchange reveals how different Zuckerberg's life in Palo Alto was compared to Saverin's life back on the East Coast:

Saverin: So you guys go out a lot to partiens [sic] and such there?

Zuckerberg: But in general we don't do fun things.

Zuckerberg: But that's OK because the business is fun.

Saverin: Lol yeah it is fun. No fun things though?

Zuckerberg: Eh, enough.

But then Saverin did something that really pissed Zuckerberg off: He ran unauthorized ads on Facebook.

Worse, the ads were for a startup Saverin was running entirely on his own, a job boards site called Joboozle.

Zuckerberg blasted Saverin for this in an email:

You developed Joboozle knowing that at some point Facebook would probably want to do something with jobs. This was pretty surprising to us, because you basically made something on the side that will end up competing with Facebook and that's pretty bad by itself. But putting ads up on Facebook to advertise it, especially for free, is just mean.

What finally ruined the relationship between Saverin and Zuckerberg for good was Facebook's need for funding.

As that first summer went on and TheFacebook.com grew more popular than anyone imagined, the company needed money to keep running. Finding investors wasn't hard. As early as July, Silicon Valley bigwigs like Mark Pincus, Reid Hoffman, and Peter Thiel were lining up to give Mark cash. Things were going so well, in fact, that Mark soon decided to commit to the company and not return to Harvard for his junior year.

What was hard, however, was getting Facebook co-founder Saverin's attention, getting him to make a decision, and getting him to sign off on the reformation of Facebook as a company under Delaware law —a crucial step before any funding deals could be completed.

At one point, Zuckerberg emailed Saverin to offer him frequent flyer miles if it would get him out to Palo Alto. Saverin didn't take the offer. The situation soon became critical, because without financing, TheFacebook.com would end up running on Zuckerberg family loans.

Eventually, Zuckerberg decided to solve the problem by cutting Saverin out of the company.

In an IM with Moskovitz, Zuckerberg explained why:

I maintain that he fucked himself…He was supposed to set up the company, get funding, and make a business model. He failed at all three…Now that I'm not going back to Harvard I don't need to worry about getting beaten by Brazilian thugs.

sean parker"I'm just going to cut him out."

When Zuckerberg and Moskovitz moved out to Palo Alto in June 2004, they ran into Sean Parker, an Internet startup kid best known for cofounding Napster. Parker soon joined TheFacebook.com.

Parker's first task was to do one of things Saverin was supposed to do, but hadn't yet: help Facebook find money.  Parker had raised money for Napster and he knew his way around Silicon Valley. He quickly proved himself capable. For Zuckerberg, this only reinforced the idea that Saverin was expendable.

The only problem was: How would Zuckerberg cut Facebook's third-biggest stakeholder and co-founder out of the company?

In an IM exchange with Parker after a meeting with Peter Thiel, who would soon become Facebook's first outside investor, Mark and Sean discussed the Saverin problem. Zuckerberg hinted at a hardball solution, one based on some "dirty tricks" used by Peter Thiel.

Thiel had learned these tricks, Parker said, from one of the most legendary venture capitalists in the Valley, Michael Moritz of Sequoia. Sequoia has funded Google, Yahoo, PayPal, Zappos, and many other massive tech companies.

Parker: Peter [Thiel] tried some dirty tricks. All that shit he does is like classic Moritz shit.

Zuckerberg: Haha really?

Parker: Only Moritz does it way better.

Zuckerberg: That's weak.

Parker: I bet he learned that from Mike.

Zuckerberg: Well, now I learned it from him and I'll do it to Eduardo.

In later emails and IMs, we learn what "dirty tricks" Zuckerberg intended to pull to get TheFacebook.com funding without having to wait for sign-off from Saverin.

His plan: Reduce Saverin's stake in TheFacebook.com by creating a new company, a Delaware corporation, to acquire the old company (the Florida LLC formed in April), and then distribute new shares in the new company to everybody but Saverin. Mark discussed this plan with confidants over IM several times.

Here's one instance:

Confidant: How are you going to get around Eduardo?

Zuckerberg: I'm going to buy the LLC

Zuckerberg: And then give him less shares in the company that bought it

Confidant: I'm not sure it's worth a potential lawsuit just to redistribute shares. You have nothing to gain.

Zuckerberg: No I do because until I do this I need to run everything by Eduardo. After this I have control

In another, Mark writes:

"Eduardo is refusing to co-operate at all…We basically now need to sign over our intellectual property to a new company and just take the lawsuit…I'm just going to cut him out and then settle with him. And he'll get something I'm sure, but he deserves something…He has to sign stuff for investments and he's lagging and I can't take the lag."

Zuckerberg pulled the trigger, sending an email to his lawyer telling him to put the plan into effect.

In this previously unpublished email, Zuckerberg writes of Saverin: "Is there a way to do this without making it painfully apparent to him that he's being diluted to 10%?"

In response, Zuckerberg's lawyer issues a prescient warning:

"As Eduardo is the only shareholder being diluted by the grants issuances there is substantial risk that he may claim the issuances, especially the ones to Dustin and Mark, but also to Sean, are a breach of fiduciary duty later on if not now. "


The plan works

In the middle of that summer, Zuckerberg's plan to oust his cofounder went off without a hitch.

On July 29, 2004, the new company, TheFacebook.com was incorporated in Delaware. Then it acquired the old company, formed back in April as an LLC in Florida.

On September 27, 2004, Peter Thiel formally acquired 9% of the new company with a convertible note worth $500,000. Before the transaction, Facebook ownership was divided between Zuckerberg, with 65%, Saverin, with 30%, and Moskovitz, with 5%. After the transaction, the new company was divided between Zuckerberg, with 40%, Saverin, with 24%, Moskovitz, with 16%, and Thiel with 9%. The rest, about 20%, went to an options pool for future employees. From there, a good chunk of equity went to Eduardo's replacement, TheFacebook.com's new COO, Sean Parker.

On October 31, 2004, Saverin signed a shareholder agreement that alloted him 3 million shares of common stock in the new company. In the agreement, he handed over all relevant intellectual property and turned over his voting rights to Mark Zuckerberg. Zuckerberg became Facebook's sole director.

On January 7, 2005, Zuckerberg caused Facebook to issue 9 million shares of common stock in the new company. He took 3.3. million shares for himself and gave 2 million to Sean Parker and 2 million to Dustin Moskovitz. This share issuance instantly diluted Saverin's stake in the company from ~24% to below 10%. 

Mark's plan had succeeded. Eduardo was, for all intents and purposes, gone.

Bringing down the house

In a testament to how little Saverin was involved in Facebook's operations after Zuckerberg left Harvard, Saverin apparently only found out how badly he'd been diluted in April 2005, when TheFacebook.com sent him a letter seeking approval for its second formal round of funding.

Fifteen days after that letter was sent from TheFacebook.com's HQ, one came back from Eduardo's lawyers. The next day, Zuckerberg finally fired Saverin.

It was this moment in history that "The Social Network" attempted to capture in the scene we embedded at the start of this story.

The lawsuits predictably followed. 

First, Facebook filed a lawsuit against Saverin, arguing that the stock-purchase agreements he had signed in October were invalid. Then Saverin sued Zuckerberg, alleging he spent Facebook's money (his money) on personal expenses over the summer.

The jilted Saverin grew bitter. At one point, he reached out to Cameron Winklevoss, Tyler Winklevoss, and Divvya Narendra – the Harvard students who allege that Mark Zuckerberg stole their idea for the company in the first place.

Eventually, sources say, Saverin decided to attack Zuckerberg's reputation.

He approached Ben Mezrich—the author of Bringing Down The House, a book about how a group of MIT students made it big in Vegas—and offered him a book about how a group of Harvard students made it big in Silicon Valley.  Bringing Down The House makes its characters out to be rock stars and scoundrels; the Facebook book, Accidental Billionaires, does the same.

Then in 2010, Columbia Pictures made a movie based on the book. It features cocaine, models, and dark, moody, lighting from David Fincher, the director who brought you "Fight Club."  It's a good flick. Because of its source material, it makes Saverin into more of a victim than he really was.

After Saverin began talking to Mezrich, he and Facebook settled their lawsuits.  Facebook went from officially denying Saverin's status as a cofounder to listing him as one on its Web site. As a part of the settlement, Saverin stopped talking to the press.

Like the Winklevoss brothers, Eduardo Saverin clearly felt he got screwed by Mark Zuckerberg in Facebook's early days, and in one way, he did.

We can tell from the previously unpublished letter included in this story that Zuckerberg didn't really want Saverin to notice his stake in Facebook was being diluted.

But also like the Winklevosses, Saverin won huge in the end. Thanks to Zuckerberg and the rest of the Facebook team, most of Saverin's $10 billion wealth still comes from his little $15,000 investment, with no further effort from himself.

Having renounced his US citizenship to avoid paying a boatload of taxes on his Facebook wealth, Saverin now resides in Singapore.

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Expat Facebook Cofounder Eduardo Saverin Has A Bentley And Doesn't Know How To Spend His IPO Billions

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Eduardo Saverin

Facebook cofounder Eduardo Saverin, recently making headlines for exiting the United States by renouncing his citizenship, is apparently living quite the life in Singapore.

A new profile in the New York Time has a lot of interesting details about the new billionaire's playboy lifestyle. He's apparently so rich that he doesn't even know how to spend his money:

Thanks to the interconnected world Mr. Saverin helped to create, the Internet is full of people sharing photos and stories of him embraced by statuesque women and drinking expensive Champagne. “It’s a misperception, especially the playboy,” he said. “I do have a Bentley. I do go out. I’d rather not go into personal details.”

...As for himself, good advice for the single young billionaire is harder to find. He said he had spoken with a number of people with tremendous wealth, “but every experience is unique. Certainly there has been no one who was a college kid, and got it this fast.”

“What does this enable me to do? What am I provided with to help?” he asked. “Right now, I don’t know how to deploy the capital and the blessings.”

As for Facebook's upcoming IPO on Friday, Saverin told the New York Times he would watch the IPO quietly with a few friends in Singapore—which would happen in the middle of the night.

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Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin is in talks to invest in CoinDXC that will seal the Indian crypto exchange's unicorn status, report says

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Eduardo Saverin speaks at the Tech in Asia Singapore 2016

Summary List Placement

Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin's B Capital is in discussions to close an investment round for Indian crypto exchange CoinDCX that could value the company at more than $1 billion, the Economic Times reported on Wednesday.

San Francisco-based digital asset investment fund Polychain Capital and crypto exchange Coinbase's venture capital arm are other participants in the round that could raise between $100 to $120 million, the report said, citing three sources familiar with the matter.

For startups to attain a $1 billion valuation was once an uncommon feat, hence why they share a name with a rare mystical animal - "unicorn."

B Capital, Polychain Capital, and CoinDCX didn't immediately respond to Insider's request for comment, while Coinbase declined to comment.

CoinDCX, launched in 2018, counts over 100,000 active monthly users and sees more than $40 million in daily trading volume, according to figures on its website. The company's user base has surged 700% since March 2020, and its registered users reportedly stood at 1.5 million as of June.

Co-founders Sumit Gupta and Neeraj Khandelwal raised about $20 million through three rounds of funding in 2020, according to the ET

CoinDCX's billion-dollar status would make it the country's first crypto unicorn, the report said.

The absence of clear regulations and a previous threat of a blanket ban on cryptocurrencies has kept some local investors away from crypto-focused firms, but the industry has managed to secure investments from international funds and entrepreneurs like Mark Cuban. 

Indian crypto firm Polygon received an undisclosed investment from Cuban in May this year. 

Cryptocurrency investments in India grew from about $200 million to nearly $40 billion in the 12 months to June, according to data firm Chainalysis. The country ranks as high as 11 out of 154 nations in terms of cryptocurrency adoption, data shows.

Read More: Denmark's most popular eToro trader breaks down how his time as an elite chess player helped shape the strategy that made him 400% returns on bitcoin this year and led 20,000 people to copy his portfolio

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NOW WATCH: Why we knock on wood and the origins of other common superstitions

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