The Rise of Facebook
The Rise of Facebook
In 2005, Zuckerberg's enterprise received a
huge boost from the venture capital firm Accel Partners. Accel invested $12.7
million into the network, which at the time was open only to ivy league
students. Zuckerberg's company then granted access to other colleges, high
school and international schools, pushing the site's membership to more than
5.5 million users by December 2005. The site then began attracting the interest
of other companies, who wanted to advertize with the popular social hub. Not
wanting to sell out, Zuckerberg turned down offers from companies such as
Yahoo! and MTV Networks. Instead, he focused on expanding the site, opening up
his project to outside developers and adding more features.
Zuckerberg seemed to be going nowhere but up,
however in 2006, the business mogul faced his first big hurdle. The creators of
Harvard Connection claimed that Zuckerberg stole their idea, and insisted the
software developer needed to pay for their business losses. Zuckerberg
maintained that the ideas were based on two very different types of social
networks but, after lawyers searched Zuckerberg's records, incriminating
Instant Messages revealed that Zuckerberg may have intentionally stolen the
intellectual property of Harvard Connection and offered Facebook users' private
information to his friends.
Zuckerberg later apologized for the
incriminating messages, saying he regretted them. "If you're going to go
on to build a service that is influential and that a lot of people rely on,
then you need to be mature, right?" he said in an interview with The New Yorker. "I
think I've grown and learned a lot."
Although an initial settlement of $65 million
was reached between the two parties, the legal dispute over the matter
continued well into 2011, after Narendra and the Winklevosses claimed they were
misled in regards to the value of their stock.
Zuckerberg faced yet another personal
challenge when the 2009 book The
Accidental Billionaires, by writer Ben Mezrich, hit stores. Mezrich
was heavily criticized for his re-telling of Zuckerberg's story, which used
invented scenes, re-imagined dialogue and fictional characters. Regardless of
how true-to-life the story was, Mezrich managed to sell the rights of the tale
to screenwriter Aaron Sorkin, and the critically acclaimed film The Social Network received eight Academy Award
nominations.
Zuckerberg objected strongly to the film's
narrative, and later told a reporter atThe New Yorker that many of the details in the film
were inaccurate. For example, Zuckerberg has been dating longtime girlfriend
Priscilla Chan, a Chinese-American medical student he met at Harvard, since
2003. He also said he never had interest in joining any of the final clubs.
"It's interesting what stuff they focused on getting right; like, every
single shirt and fleece that I had in that movie is actually a shirt or fleece
that I own," Zuckerberg told a reporter at a start-up conference in 2010.
"So there's all this stuff that they got wrong and a bunch of random
details that they got right."
Yet Zuckerberg and Facebook continued to
succeed, in spite of the criticism.Time magazine named him Person of the Year
in 2010, and Vanity
Fairplaced him at the top of their New Establishment list. Forbes also ranked Zuckerberg at No.
35—beating out Apple CEO Steve Jobs—on its "400" list, estimating his
net worth to be $6.9 billion.
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