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Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg: Hacker. Dropout. CEO.

By: Ellen McGirtTue May 1, 2007 at 9:19 AM
Hacker. Dropout. CEO.

When Mark Zuckerberg showed up in Palo Alto three years ago, he had no car, no house, and no job. Today, he's at the helm of a smokin'-hot social-networking site, Facebook, and turning down billion-dollar offers. Can this kid be for real?

EnlargeHacker. Dropout. CEO.


EnlargeHacker. Dropout. CEO.


Youth Patrol: Zuckerberg’s brain trust is populated mostly by twentysomethings. Here, he shares a moment with Moskovitz, 22, and Cohler—an old hand at 30.


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“I'm just lucky to be alive." Mark Zuckerberg, the 22-year-old founder and CEO of social-networking site Facebook, is talking about the time he came face-to-face with the barrel of a gun. It was the spring of 2005, and he was driving from Palo Alto to Berkeley.

Just a few hours earlier, he had signed documents that secured a heady $12.7 million in venture capital to finance his fledgling business. It was a coming-of-age moment, and he was on his way to celebrate with friends in the East Bay. But things turned weird when he pulled off the road for gas. As Zuckerberg got out of the car to fill the tank, a man appeared from the shadows, waving a gun and ranting. "He didn't say what he wanted," Zuckerberg says. "I figured he was on drugs." Keeping his eyes down, Zuckerberg said nothing, got back into his car, and drove off, unscathed.

Today, it is an episode that he talks about only reluctantly. (A former employee spilled the beans.) But it fits the road he has taken--an adventure with unexpected, sometimes harrowing, moments that has turned out better than anyone might have predicted.

Zuckerberg's life so far is like a movie script. A supersmart kid invents a tech phenomenon while attending an Ivy League school--let's say, Harvard--and launches it to rave reviews. Big shots circle his dorm to make his acquaintance; he drops out of college to grow his baby and Change The World As We Know It. Just three years in, what started as a networking site for college students has become a go-to tool for 19 million registered users, including employees of government agencies and Fortune 500 companies. More than half of the users visit every day. When a poorly explained new feature brought howls of protests from users--some 700,000--the media old and new jumped to cover the backlash. But Facebook emerged stronger than ever. According to comScore Media Metrix, which tracks Web activity, it is now the sixth most-trafficked site in the United States--1% of all Internet time is spent on Facebook. ComScore also rates it the number-one photo-sharing site on the Web, with 6 million pictures uploaded daily. And it is starting to compete with Google and other tech titans as a destination for top young engineering talent in Silicon Valley. Debra Aho Williamson, a senior analyst at eMarketer, says it is on track to bring in $100 million in revenue this year--serious money indeed.

Yet there is an undercurrent of controversy about whether Mark Zuckerberg is making the right decisions about the juggernaut he has created. Late last year, a blog called TechCrunch posted documents said to be a part of an internal valuation of Facebook by Yahoo. The documents projected that Facebook would generate $969 million in revenue, with 48 million users, by 2010. The New York Times and others reported that Yahoo had made a $1 billion offer to buy Facebook--and Zuckerberg and his partners had turned it down. This followed an earlier rumor of a $750 million offer from Viacom. Yahoo, Viacom, and Facebook would not comment on the deal talk (and they still won't). But Silicon Valley has been abuzz ever since.

"It's all been very interesting," deadpans Zuckerberg, sitting in a conference room in Facebook's Palo Alto headquarters. He looks every bit the geek in his zippered brown sweatshirt, baggy khakis, and Adidas sandals. He came into the room eating breakfast cereal from a paper bowl with a plastic spoon. He still lives in a rented apartment, with a mattress on the floor and only two chairs and a table for furniture. ("I cooked dinner for a girlfriend once," he admits at one point. "It didn't work well.") He walks or bikes to the office every day.

Zuckerberg's college-kid style reinforces the doubts of those who see the decision to keep Facebook independent as a lapse in judgment. In less than two years, the two reigning Web 2.0 titans have sold out to major corporations: MySpace accepted $580 million to join News Corp., and YouTube took $1.5 billion from Google. Surely any smart entrepreneur would jump at a chance to piggyback on those deals.

From Issue 115 | May 2007

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Recent Comments | 67 Total

September 2, 2009 at 10:26am by Claire Jennings

I am too, like Eric, one of the people who were forced to use Facebook. I used to like Faceparty back in the day, but that went out of fashion when myspace came through. Myspace was pretty good at enabling you to personalise your profile in whichever way you liked. Then i was moved to Facebook - my friends made me a profile and off i went. To this day i have never been obsessed or mad with it like some people, but whether you need to be on it 24/7 or not, it is still good for keeping in touch with friends and if you have more time, playing online games with them. To date it is the best and most entertaining Social networking site, but will it be for much longer?

September 9, 2009 at 2:02pm by Eddie Jones

He looks every bit the geek in his zippered brown sweatshirt, baggy khakis, and Adidas sandals.
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Zuckerberg's life so far is like a movie script.

September 13, 2009 at 12:00am by Kasichai Bunsong

he is already successful in the facebook business today. He is very young.

I will be as same as you.

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September 14, 2009 at 11:17am by

Mark Zuckerberg is a legendary person I must say. I will write an essay about him next week in my college.
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September 18, 2009 at 2:05am by Sports Fitness

Mark has done a great job with facebook, no matter what anyone says, but you have to keep in mind he is a tech guy not a business CEO. It's going to take a lot of work to bring facebook into real profitability. Further, the whole fitness market on facebook is bad, a lot of fitness models are being banned for beeing too 'open' with their looks, or using steroids , it's all wrong!

September 20, 2009 at 1:28pm by Bo Majors

I had a case of bad credit in 1992 and wanted to buy a home. When I went to my local bank the mortgage officer told me I had to get good credit, use a free credit dispute from or fix all the errors on my report. When I tried to contact Free Equifax credit report, Free Experian credit report and Free Trans Union credit report, but I found them impossible to contact. They seemed to try to hide the phone numbers addresses and company information so I made some web pages with contact info. Then I posted all the Free Credit Help things I did to fix errors and raise my credit score fast quickly free.

September 21, 2009 at 1:24pm by ben Shi

This is a very inspirational article. this guy is lucky.
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September 21, 2009 at 5:42pm by Bon McReady

How did you manage to make facebook that big? It is really impressive. A lot of school and college drop outs wind up on drugs. This is very well done that you have built some thing useful.

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September 22, 2009 at 3:04am by bagus wahyu

this man is awesome

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September 25, 2009 at 12:08am by Christopher Jeschke

Facebook is amazing! I love Facebook and the fact that someone just a few years older than me built it is really cool!

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September 26, 2009 at 1:22am by Ovidiu C

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October 1, 2009 at 5:57am by daycare daycare

what a dropout can do if he/she can't rely on him/herself. He is just a tiny percentage of those dropout students who make it out. I am amazed of him, of course. But I will do more if he also has good academic record.

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October 7, 2009 at 12:13pm by Bassam Adib

Dear Sir,

We received this mail and reference number, please can u send me your email as to discuss this matter.Because maybe this is a scam. So, please reply as soon as you can.

Ref Num/132/756/4087
Batch Number: 538901527-BB67
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TRANSGLOBE INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
CONTACT PERSON: Garry Jeff
TEL: 00447031886958
FAX: 0044865267711
EMAIL: transglobei@ymail.com
Yours Sincerely
MARK ZUCKERBERG CEO FACEBOOK

My E mail : bassam_autonews@yahoo.com

October 7, 2009 at 12:13pm by Bassam Adib

Dear Sir,

We received this mail and reference number, please can u send me your email as to discuss this matter.Because maybe this is a scam. So, please reply as soon as you can.

Ref Num/132/756/4087
Batch Number: 538901527-BB67
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TRANSGLOBE INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
CONTACT PERSON: Garry Jeff
TEL: 00447031886958
FAX: 0044865267711
EMAIL: transglobei@ymail.com
Yours Sincerely
MARK ZUCKERBERG CEO FACEBOOK

My E mail : bassam_autonews@yahoo.com

October 7, 2009 at 12:17pm by Bassam Adib

Dear Sir,

We received this mail and reference number, please can u send me your email as to discuss this matter.Because maybe this is a scam. So, please reply as soon as you can.

Ref Num/132/756/4087
Batch Number: 538901527-BB67
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TRANSGLOBE INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
CONTACT PERSON: Garry Jeff
TEL: 00447031886958
FAX: 0044865267711
EMAIL: transglobei@ymail.com
Yours Sincerely
MARK ZUCKERBERG CEO FACEBOOK

My E mail : bassam_autonews@yahoo.com

October 11, 2009 at 1:36am by cristi m

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October 19, 2009 at 6:43am by Cesc Tottle

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November 13, 2009 at 11:36pm by Michael Reichel

Yes its a great and informative article.

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November 23, 2009 at 10:04pm by Elisavet-lovelife Mavroudis

hi Mark a friend send me thies as a message is thies true,,?????

Facebook is recently becoming very overpopulated,there have been many members complaining that Facebook is becoming very slow. Records show that the reason is that there are too many non-active Facebook members and, on the other side, too many new Facebook members.

We will be sending this message around to see if members are active or not. If you are active please send to at least 15 other users using Copy+ Paste to show that you are still active. *Those who do not send this message within 2 weeks will be deleted without hesitation to create more space.*

Send this message to all your friends and to show me that you're still active and you will not be deleted.

Founder of Facebook,
Mark Zuckerberg