Monday, December 20, 2010

Facebook, The Good of Social Media? From Facebook to WikiLeaks

 Hollywood has already made a movie about Facebook, which wasn't particularly flattering to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's founder. However, according to the article below, consider if in the future a movie is made about WikiLeaks and all the drama surrounding that social media. Would the indiscretions surrounding Facebook be considered child's play by comparison?  Interesting.
    . . . June

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From Facebook to WikiLeaks: The good, bad and ugly of technology
latimes.com:

Years from now, when Hollywood makes a more-or-less factual feature film about WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, perhaps starring a puffier, silver-haired Jesse Eisenberg, will it be titled 'The Anti-Social Network?' Or maybe 'The Social Network That Big Brother Wanted 86'ed?'

Will Assange be portrayed as a Dadaist prankster? Or a tragic Promethean figure, a digital-age Daniel Ellsberg, persecuted for bestowing enlightenment on mankind at enormous personal cost?

Or, at the other extreme, as both left-leaning intellectuals like Todd Gitlin and rightist politicos such as Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee maintain, will he be viewed instead as a slash-and-burn "minister of chaos (Gitlin) and "an anti-American operative with blood on his hands" (Palin)?

In retrospect, the release this year of "The Social Network," David Fincher's brilliantly chiaroscuro portrait of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, looks like a warm-up, a sort of pop-culture prophesy, in advance of the polemics that have erupted around Assange. Compared to WikiLeaks' revelations about the Saudis' lobbying for the U.S. to take out Iran's nuclear capability, rating your ex-girlfriend's "hotness" on Facebook seems like, literally, child's play.

And if "The Social Network" suggested a modern-day spin on "Citizen Kane," as more than one film critic suggested, a future biopic based on Assange might play like an updated "Dr. Strangelove," mixing black comedy and absurdist farce with sobering meditations on the 21st century's answer to the Atom bomb: the global Internet, with its awesome capacity for creation and destruction. Assange could be seen as a kind of digital-age J. Robert Oppenheimer, hoping that by forging a powerful weapon he could help check governments' abuses of power. Like Oppenheimer before him, he's discovered it's easier to harness technology than to change the fundamental (and fundamentally secretive) nature of power.

However you regard Assange and his cyber-assault on diplomatic secrets, it's in large part because of him that 2010 will be remembered as a pivot point in the tussle between social and antisocial networks. In the year now concluding, we've seen a ratcheting up of the contest pitting networks that open our minds, disseminate useful information and constructively connect us with one another against networks that exploit our emotions, replicate falsehoods, enslave us to high-tech toys and turn the awkward traces of our personal lives into public titillation and downloadable humiliation.

Assuming, that is, that those are separate networks. But of course they're not.

Technologically speaking, the network that enabled WikiLeaks to broadcast state secrets as openly as if they were pop-up Viagra ads is the same as the network of credit card companies and website hosts like Amazon that tried to pull the plug out from WikiLeaks after politicians began howling in protest. And it was the same technological network, in turn, that enabled WikiLeaks' anonymous supporters to bombard Amazon, Pay Pal and other corporate powers with hacker attacks.

Read entire article

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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Time's Person of the Year 2010 Is Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Time Magazine has named Mark Zuckerberg Time's Person of the Year, according to the article below. The online vote for Person of the Year was won handily by Julian Assange, but the prize was given to the Facebook founder instead.




Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO, named Time's Person of the Year 2010:
washingtonpost.com Wednesday, December 15, 2010; 12:11 PM

Time magazine has named Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and CEO their Person of the Year 2010. As Hayley Tsukayama reported:

Time magazine named Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg Person of the Year for 2010. Zuckerberg, 26, owns about a quarter of Facebook's shares and is, to quote Time, "a billionaire six times over."
After pledging earlier this year to give $100 million to the Newark, N.J., school system, Zuckerberg last week joined the Giving Pledge--the effort led by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and investor Warren Buffett to convince some of the country's richest to give away most of their wealth. Others that have joined the campaign include New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, media titan Barry Diller, CNN founder Ted Turner and filmmaker George Lucas.
On his Facebook page, Zuckerberg on Wednesday commented that "Being named as Time Person of the Year is a real honor and recognition of how our little team is building something that hundreds of millions of people want to use to make the world more open and connected. I'm happy to be a part of that."
As Melissa Bell explained, the online vote for Person of the Year was won handily by Julian Assange, but the prize was given to the Facebook founder instead:
Despite Julian Assange handily winning the online vote, the editors of Time opted for Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook, as their person of the year. The editor's letter said, "There is an erosion of trust in authority, a decentralizing of power and at the same time, perhaps, a greater faith in one another," and that Zuckerberg is at the center of these changes

Read entire article


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Sunday, December 12, 2010

A Microsoft Corporation Takeover Bid For Facebook?

 It appears that there is a potential takeover bid in the works for Facebook by Microsoft Corporation, according to the article below. A merger of these two giants has a magnitude almost impossible to imagine. Facebook and Google are among the top-visited websites in the world. Think of the potential of advertising to these two combined. It boggles the mind.
    . . . June

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More Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) Facebook Details:
Emoneydaily.com - Posted on 12 December 2010 by Felice Medders

More info about the potential Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) takeover bid for Facebook have emerged.

One of the executives from Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) said that the company attempted to acquire social networking giant Facebook in 2007 but failed to impress Facebook’s co-founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Technology blog TechCrunch reported that during an interview with Microsoft Corporation’s (NASDAQ:MSFT) senior director of corporate strategy and acquisitions, Fritz Lanman, told “Ballmer took this reply as sort of challenge. He went back to Microsoft’s headquarters and concocted a plan intended to acquire Facebook in stages over a period of years to enable Zuckerberg to keep calling the shots.

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) stocks was at 27.34 at the end of the day’s trading on 12/10/2010. There’s been a 14.6% change in the stock price over the past 3 months.


Read entire article


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Monday, November 22, 2010

How Facebook Deals With Social ADVERTISING


 Facebook and other Social media have changed the way people interact on the internet. Buying advertising space on a website like Facebook would not have been an option a few years ago, but according to the following article, this is now one of their major revenues. According to the article below, one of their most important innovations was to reach out to the smallest advertisers with self-serve ads. Apparently, Setting up a Facebook ad is simpler than using Google AdWords. Leave it to Facebook to simplify everything.
     .  .  .  June

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How Facebook fixed the social advertising problem
Fortune Tech:

So much of the discussion around Facebook centers on the way it's shaping our social interactions with others that it's easy to overlook how profoundly the company is rewriting the rules of online advertising. When Facebook's revenue is mentioned, it's usually in the aggregate: The six-year-old company will bring in as much as $2 billion this year and close to twice that next year.

The bulk of that figure will come from selling ads on its social-network platform – a web technology that was seen as barren soil for ad revenue until a year or so ago. Facebook made social ads pay through a number of tricks. One of the most important innovations was to reach out to the smallest advertisers with self-serve ads on its social-networking site.

Setting up a Facebook ad is simpler than using Google AdWords. To test the idiot-proof concept, I set up a page for my work as a freelance writer. It wasn't terribly elegant but it did take less than two minutes. In another five minutes, I had created an ad targeted at my own demographic – male, 40s, college grad, living in the San Francisco Bay Area and interested in business or technology journalism.

Facebook instantly narrowed it down to 4,220 members who might see the ad and recommended I bid between 30 and 45 cents per impression, or between 72 cents and $1.05 per click. Granted, it must have been one of the most thoughtless and ineffective ads in Facebook's history, with no hope for a return on the 30 cents I bid. But it illustrated an important point: In less than ten minutes, any business can not only hang up a virtual shingle on Facebook, it can also became an advertiser.

Basic tutorials on the site help advertisers design more effective ads. Once they are live, they can receive customizable, granular data on its performance in a simple format that encourages them to experiment with different kinds of ads. Tweaking the location or demographics of users or trying out different text, images and keywords is aided by data comparing the response to alternate ads.

Facebook benefits from the experimentation too. The company doesn't charge for the data, but the experiments of its legion of advertisers offers the company an unprecedented insight into what makes people click on ads on its site.

Read entire article


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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Is Facebook Going Into The E-MAIL Business?

 Facebook and Google are already in competition for internet popularity. This service would certainly boost Facebook's popularity even more. According to the article below, it isn't official just yet. We may have to wait a few days for a definitive answer.
    . . . June


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Facebook to Start an E-Mail Service
NYTimes.com: November 12, 2010, 8:20 PM By Miguel Helft

Facebook has more than 500 million users around the world. And Americans spend more of their time online with Facebook than with any other Internet company, including Google and Yahoo.

Now the company wants people to weave their online lives even more tightly into Facebook.

On Monday, Facebook is expected to unveil a revamped set of communications services that will include an e-mail system in which users will have addresses with the facebook.com suffix, according to two people briefed on Facebook’s plans who asked to speak on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss them publicly.

Facebook has invited reporters to a press conference on Monday, but has refused to say what it plans to announce. The company declined to comment on any unannounced communications services.

Facebook already offers an online chat service and an internal message system between Facebook users. The new services, whose exact details could not be learned, would greatly expand Facebook’s communications offerings.

But one person with knowledge of Facebook’s plans said that the new communications services would not be meant to be used on their own, like other e-mail systems. Instead, they would be tightly coupled with Facebook’s other services.

“They are not trying to do a standalone rival to Gmail,” the person said. “They are building an integrated experience in everything they do.”


Still the new services could sharpen Facebook’s competition with Google and others.

Read More


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If you're a Facebook fan, wouldn't you use Facebook email service instead of Google? Leave a comment

June


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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Will Facebook Be Announcing a Phone on Wednesday?

 Wow!  This leaves us all wondering!  According to the article below, Facebook, the social-networking giant sent out invitations Monday for a special event Wednesday with little in the way of details -- leaving a curious public to speculate on just what Facebook has in store for us. Will it be an announcement about some new and reamped services? - or possibly the potential launching pad for the oft-rumored Facebook Phone? We don't know!
    . . . June


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FOXNews.com - Will Facebook Announce a Phone on Wednesday?:
Published October 05, 2010 | FoxNews.com

New phone? Revamped service? More millions of charitable donations? Complaints about the movie? With details short and buzz high, rumors are stacking up about a special Facebook event Wednesday.

The social-networking giant sent out invitations Monday for a special event Wednesday with little in the way of details -- leaving a curious public to speculate on just what Facebook has in store for us.

The popular website, now with 500 million users and (like it or not) its very own blockbuster movie, has been especially busy as of late: launching a geolocation feature called Places in August, overhauling its gaming notifications, and most recently upgrading its photo platform to allow for higher-resolution pictures. Will we see some event unveiling more information and branding about these things? Possibly, some argue.

Others expect Wednesday to be even bigger -- the potential launching pad for the oft-rumored Facebook
phone. The event is scheduled to start at 10 a.m. and last through lunch, after all, and Mark Zuckerberg himself was rather nebulous the last time he discussed the potential for Facebook phone.

"At the end of the day, when people say 'building a phone' they actually can mean very different things," he told TechCrunch at the time.

Read entire article

Facebook Stock Splits 5-to-1 For More Affordable Investing

 It's good to see any company's bottom line increasing , and when a company does a 5 to1 share split, it means that it's doing very well. I feel that what they have accomplished is that they have preserved a market for the smaller investors to be able to buy these shares. After all, lots of people would like to have a piece of Facebook
    . . . June


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Facebook announces 5-to-1 shares split
Financials | ZDNet UK: "NEWS

Facebook formally sliced up its stock in a 5-for-1 division on Friday — a move designed to keep the price of individual shares lower as demand for the privately owned social-networking site on secondary markets has been driving it upward.

"The reason is that the stock has risen significantly since our last split, and this allows us to bring it into a similar price range as other private companies," Facebook spokesman Jonny Thaw told ZDNet UK's sister site CNET News. "It also allows us to give everyone larger stock unit grants without increasing dilution for shareholders."

It is the third time in Facebook's six-year history that the company has undergone a split of its shares, following a 4-for-1 division in July 2006 and another in October 2007. Splitting stock is not an uncommon practice, considering that when individual share prices grow very high it can limit their growth. A lower share price can make the stock more accessible to small-time investors.

Read More

Friday, September 24, 2010

“Startup: Education”, Mark Zuckerberg's $100 Million Foundation

 Regardless of what you might think of Zuckerberg, this foundation is excellent for the kids who will benefit. According to the following article, Zuckerberg is launching Startup: Education, a $100 million foundation dedicated to improving education in Newark, New Jersey and the rest of the U.S. The ultimate aim is to create a model for rewarding excellence in education on a national level. Great Job!
    . . . June


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Mark Zuckerberg Announces $100 Million Foundation: “Startup: Education”:
Mashable -Jennifer Van Grove

Punk, traitor, genius or philanthropic entrepreneur? Mark Zuckerberg can be described by many a colorful adjective, and on Friday, October 1, the world will watch Hollywood both celebrate and vilify Facebook’s founder in The Social Network.

Just one week in advance of the movie’s debut, Zuckerberg is launching Startup: Education, a $100 million foundation dedicated to improving education in Newark, New Jersey and the rest of the U.S. The ultimate aim is to create a model for rewarding excellence in education on a national level.

The fund, which was first revealed on Wednesday but formally announced today, will work with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s and Newark Mayor Cory Booker’s new bipartisan initiative, the Partnership for Education in Newark, which was also officially unveiled today. Zuckerberg and Christie will discuss the news in a media conference call this afternoon at 1:00 p.m. ET. Later, Christie and Booker will discuss the partnership on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

In addition to working with Zuckerberg’s new foundation, the Partnership for Education in Newark will also work with the Newark Education and Youth Development Fund, a non-profit organization that aims to raise an additional $150 million for Newark’s youth. Currently, only 40% of Newark children can read and write at grade level by the end of third grade.

In a blog on the Startup: Education Facebook Page, Zuckerberg writes, “I believe in the Mayor and his vision, and that’s why I want to help them succeed. Using my own Facebook stock, I’m creating the Startup: Education foundation with over $100 million to invest in educating and improving the lives of young people. I’m also challenging others who want to improve education in America to match my contributions.”

Read More . . .

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook Donates $100 Million In Facebook Shares


Mark Zuckerberg, CEO
According to the following article from Forbes, Mark Zuckerberg will make a $100 million pledge to the Newark School system. At only 26-years-old, he’s following in the charitable footsteps of Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett and Oracle’s Larry Ellison. Regardless of how you might feel about these people personally, there's no question that their generosity is making a huge difference to many people's lives.
    .. June


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How Will Newark Turn Zuckerberg’s $100 Million Worth Of Facebook Shares Into Cash?
Steven Bertoni - Money Talks - Forbes:

This Friday, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg will reportedly appear on Oprah to announce his $100 million pledge to the Newark School system. At only 26-years-old, he’s following in the charitable footsteps of Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett and Oracle’s Larry Ellison.

The pledge is the easy part. The difficult question is how will Newark turn the privately owned, illiquid shares of Facebook into usable cash for their troubled school system

Zuckerberg is worth $6.9 billion, but that is mostly paper wealth based on his ownership of Facebook. Zuck likely has very little cash on hand–he lives in a humble rented house in Silicon valley. So it’s natural that he’d pledge his Facebook shares instead of cash-money.

The trouble is that these shares are not listed on a registered exchange. Past Facebook transactions have occurred through private equity deals or have traded on exchanges like SecondMarket, which specialize in unregistered, hard-to-trade securities. People at SecondMarket declined to comment on the story.

These markets for unregistered shares are opaque and thinly traded. The current SecondMarket bid for shares of Facebook is $65–that puts a $28.6 billion valuation on Facebook; much richer than recent estimates of around $23 billion. The market price seems inflated.

Read on . . .

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Is The Facebook Movie An Act Of Cold-Blooded Revenge?

The movie 'The Social Network' is due to be released and purports to be the story of Mark Zuckerberg and the founding of Facebook. It's based on Ben Mezrich's book 'The Accidental Billionaires'. According to the following article, The Accidental Billionaires exists because one of Mark's Facebook cofounders pitched the book to Mezrich in an attempt to permanently damage Mark's reputation. Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg claim that it's all a lie. How can we tell?
   . . . June


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The Facebook Movie Is An Act Of Cold-Blooded Revenge - New, Unpublished IMs Tell The Real Story:
On October 1, Columbia Pictures will release The Social Network, a film that portrays Facebook's CEO and cofounder, Mark Zuckerberg, as an arrogant nerd-punk who betrays friends and classmates in order to get what he wants – sex, money, and power.

The movie is fiction. So is the book it's based on – Ben Mezrich's The Accidental Billionaires.

Facebook hates the movie. Zuckerberg says he will not watch it.

Based on the early reviews of the movie, this makes sense.

According to sources – sources who despise Mark Zuckerberg and sources who admire him – the only reason The Accidental Billionaires exists is because one of Mark's Facebook cofounders pitched the book to Mezrich in an attempt to permanently damage Mark's reputation.

According to those sources, that cofounder and Harvard student is Eduardo Saverin.

This is the story of how Eduardo got so angry at Mark -- how, from Eduardo's perspective, Mark screwed him out of a huge chunk of Facebook stock. It's also the story of how Mark solved an early problem at Facebook, one that could potentially have prevented the company from becoming the global behemoth it is today.

The story is sourced from people involved in the founding year of Facebook, sources close to Facebook, and documents viewed by Business Insider. It includes previously unpublished emails and instant messages between Mark Zuckerberg and early Facebook colleagues and confidants.

Read more:


Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Will Google Start Its Own Social Network Soon?

Competition makes the world go around and, according to the article below, Facebook had overtaken Google in internet searches in March.Weekly traffic at Facebook exceeded Google’s for the first time that month, according to data tracker Experian Hitwise. It just makes sense then that Google will offer a social network service in order to compete.This is expected to happen sometime within the next six months or so
   . . . June


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Facebook Says Google May Start Social Networking Site Within Six Months
Bloomberg:  By Mark Lee - Sep 14, 2010 2:09 PM ET 
 
Facebook Inc., operator of the world’s most popular social-networking site, said Google Inc. may offer a similar service within six months as demand from Internet users increases.

Google is expected to start “a fairly significant social media platform,” Stephen Dolan, commercial director for Asia at Facebook, said at a conference in Hong Kong today. Google may unveil the website in “three to six months,” according to Dolan, who said his projection is based on information from media reports.

Google is stepping up acquisitions after its search engine was overtaken by Facebook, whose service allows users to share photos, video, short messages and other information with groups of friends, as the most-visited U.S. website in March. Weekly traffic at Facebook exceeded Google’s for the first time that month, according to data tracker Experian Hitwise.

“Facebook is the leader in the emerging Social Web and will face challenges from many players, both large and small,” said Ray Valdes, an analyst at Gartner Inc. “Google is Facebook’s most direct competitor, because Google is dominant in the previous generation of the Web, the content-centric Web.”
Google’s social network service won’t mandate a direct response, provided Facebook continues to carry out its mission of becoming the world’s social utility, Valdes said in an e- mailed statement.

Read on . . . 

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Mark Zuckerberg: Evil Genius Or Brilliant Classmate? See The Movie!

 So Mark Zuckerberg is the subject of a new movie The Social Network. Apparently, it purports to loosely tell the story of Mark Zuckerberg and the founding of Facebook, but it appears that it might stray from the facts here and there. It might be very interesting for some of his classmates who knew him then to critique the movie once it's out.
   . . . June


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Zuckerberg: Evil Genius Or Brilliant Classmate?:
Rebecca Davis O'Brien, The Daily Beast 

As the movie The Social Network rolls toward theaters, Rebecca O’Brien writes about Zuckerberg’s reputation around Harvard, his fraternity nickname, and why Facebook was such a hit.

Hollywood biopics are often the inverse of political autobiographies: heavy on sex and drugs, light on weighty questions of morality and leadership. If the script leaked online and the trailers are any indication, the new movie The Social Network, which purports to tell the story of Mark Zuckerberg and the founding of Facebook, will play like a conversation between Hamlet and Joe Francis, as secretly recorded by Richard Nixon. It is paranoid, sleazy, and grim.

As the film tells it, during the winter of 2004, Zuckerberg, a curmudgeonly, craven genius, bristling against authority and embittered by the culture of wealth and privilege that excludes him, creates a social network to impress vapid women and the callow preppies of Harvard’s exclusive, all-male final clubs. The film’s Zuckerberg, as played by Jesse Eisenberg, hates Harvard students, disdains fraternities, and answers to nobody. Zuckerberg, with a kind of mad scientist’s zeal, seeks popularity, profit, and revenge. In the words of the film’s ubiquitous ad campaign, he is “Poet. Prophet. Billionaire.”

That completely misses the point. Zuckerberg is, indisputably, a savant. He has also, by most accounts, broken agreements and rules. After talking to one of Facebook’s co-founders and students who were at Harvard when Zuckerberg and I were classmates, there’s one outstanding question about the creator and CEO of the 500 million-member website that today is valued at somewhere between $24 billion and $32 billion. Zuckberg was an antiauthoritarian who, through some combination of outmaneuvering, technical wizardry, and intuition, became the guy in charge. But can we trust the antiauthoritarian once he becomes the authority?


Read more:

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Facebook Claims A New Feature. Now Post Locations!

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announces a new feature of Facebook named "Places" which will allow users to share where you are, see where your friends are and discover new places. I


New Facebook feature lets you post locations
August 19, 2010 at 1:36 AM
0 0 0 Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg announces a new feature of Facebook named "Places" in Palo Alto, Calif. on Wednesday August 18, 2010. Places will allow users to share where you are, see where your friends are and discover new places. Images View Larger Images (08-18) 20:20 PDT -- Mobile geo-location applications that let people share where they shop, dine or play have become an emerging technology trend, but social media powerhouse Facebook Inc. on Wednesday joined the parade with a new feature that could bring the trend to a...
Facebook Has Been Working On This Location Feature For 8 Months
August 18, 2010 at 10:38 PM
Today at an event at their headquarters in Palo Alto, CA, Facebook unveiled their new Places product — their location/check-in solution. Obviously, their entry in this space has been rumored for a long time — a very long time. But during the Q&A session, someone asked how...
Check Proves Ceglia Paid Zuckerberg-What Now?
August 18, 2010 at 7:55 PM
There’s yet another episode to the oddball tale of Paul Ceglia, the New York man who says a 2003 contract with eventual Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg entitles him to an 84 percent share of the company: Ceglia’s local...

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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Paul Ceglia Produces Another Cancelled Check As "Proof"

Paul Ceglia's Facebook Claim
Guy Who Says He Owns 84% Of Facebook Produces Another Cancelled Check To Mark Zuckerberg
August 17, 2010 at 1:14 PM
When we last left the story about the upstate New York man who is claiming he owns 84% of Facebook (), we had concluded that the digital "contract" Ceglia had produced was probably a fake.  We had also noted that Ceglia needed to answer three questions before we were inclined to believe him: 1.  Where was the payment trail? Ceglia had only produced a $1,000 check stub, which only appeared to cover a single payment for contract development work on a Ceglia company called StreetFax.  There was no evidence that a second payment for $1,000 for 50% of "The Face Book" had been made. 3.  Where was the original paper-based contract and when would a judge and Facebook be able to...
Did Mark Zuckerberg sell Facebook for $3000?
August 17, 2010 at 9:47 AM
NEW YORK: The western New York man suing over claims he owns 84 percent of Facebook Inc has a copy of a $3,000 cashier's check his lawyer says is proof of a contract with Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg. The purported 2003 check is made out to Zuckerberg and dated three days before Paul Ceglia claims the two men signed a contract, according to the attorney....
Facebook May Make Location Announcement Wednesday
August 17, 2010 at 12:24 AM
We've just received an invitation to visit Facebook's Palo Alto campus on Wednesday to get "an update on the serviceĆ¢€™s features and products," and rumor has it the powers that be want to talk about location-based products. Kara Swisher at BoomTown her sources "indicate that Facebook will finally be rolling...
Facebook Making Possible Location Announcement Wednesday
August 16, 2010 at 11:23 PM
We've just received an invitation to visit Facebook's Palo Alto campus on Wednesday to get "an update on the serviceĆ¢€™s features and products," and rumor has it the powers that be want to talk about location-based products. Kara Swisher at BoomTown her sources "indicate that Facebook will finally be rolling...

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