2024 – Week 7 Assignment 2 to 3 pages Read the case Giving Away Facebook at the end of Chapter 16 Answer

**For Prof Mac.Queen Only** (B316 Week 7) – 2024

Week 7 Assignment 2 to 3 pages

 

Read the case “Giving Away Facebook” at the end of Chapter 16.

 

Answer the following questions and/or statements in detail:

 

1. Can you know if you have a potentially hugely successful company on your hands when you first launch it?

 

2. Should all companies take the precautions Facebook failed to take?  Or can some companies be more relaxed about such legal issues as partnerships and ownership?  Why or why not?  Use credible sources and research to support and explain.

 

3. What types of agreements and contracts do you think Mark Zuckerberg, his partners, and Facebook’s early investors should have drawn up?  Use credible sources and research to support and explain.

 

4. What contracts do you think the Winklevoss twins and Divya Narendra should have drawn up when they hired Zuckerberg to work for their company?  Use credible sources and research to support and explain.

 

 

Make sure you format your papers in proper APA 6th. Be sure to properly cite your sources inside your text using APA 6th citations rules as well as proper APA referencing guidelines  in your “References” (bibliography) section at the end of your papers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Giving Away Facebook

 

 

 

For a bunch of seemingly smart kids, the guys involved in Facebook’s

 

founding did some pretty stupid things—at least from a legal point of view.

 

This resulted in years of lawsuits and billions of dollars in settlements.

 

Most new start-ups are in the position of having to give up some

 

degree of ownership in return for early-stage financing. After all, investors

 

want to get something for their money, and that is typically a percent of the

 

 

equity—or ownership—of the company. And they deserve a big payout for

 

 

 

taking a chance on an entrepreneur, for risking their money before anyone

 

else. Nevertheless, those decisions shouldn’t be made lightly or without

 

considering the legal consequences, even when a “business” is still in the

 

idea stage. Or when it’s just being discussed in your college dorm.

 

The exact facts revolving around the founding of Facebook remain

 

in dispute. But some things are agreed upon. A site called “TheFacebook.

 

com” was launched in 2004, by Mark Zuckerberg, Dustin Moskovitz, Chris

 

Hughes, and Eduardo Saverin while they were students at Harvard University.

 

Saverin, a wealthy student, provided Zuckerberg with $15,000 to purchase

 

the servers for TheFacebook. In return, Zuckerberg allotted Saverin

 

 

30 percent of the company.1 That was generous—extremely so. And it was

 

 

 

a decision that would come back to haunt Zuckerberg.

 

In the meantime, while getting ready to launch TheFacebook, Zuckerberg

 

was also working for twins Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and for

 

Divya Narendra, who had hired him to work on their own social networking

 

site. Their site had essentially the same concept that would become

 

Facebook. The decision not to tell his employers that he was working on a

 

competing site was another problem that would come back to haunt Zuckerberg

 

and Facebook.

 

Those are the facts that are agreed upon. Other issues remain in dispute

 

and have eventually ended up in court.

 

Like many teams in a start-up venture, some founders—notably Zuckerberg

 

and Moskovitz—stayed more closely involved with growing the

 

venture, while others, particularly Saverin, had other demands on their

 

time. When founders don’t clearly delineate their responsibilities and what

 

consequences will happen for failing to live up to their responsibilities (if

 

any), this inevitably creates tensions and disagreements, which is exactly

 

what happened in the case of Facebook.

 

Zuckerberg moved the new company to Palo Alto, California (from

 

Cambridge, Massachusetts). To help finance Facebook’s growth, Zuckerberg

 

brought in other investors, notably Peter Thiel, cofounder of PayPal.

 

As a result of this investment, Saverin’s 30 percent ownership was diluted

 

substantially. Saverin alleged this was done unfairly, and later sued the

 

company. Although the exact terms of the suit were not revealed, Saverin

eventually received 5 percent of the ownership of Facebook. His

 

$15,000 investment ended up being worth many billions.

 

Another complication came about because Zuckerberg failed

 

to disclose that he had a conflict of interest while working on the

 

Winklevosses’ project. He launched Facebook a few days before

 

their intended launch, and they immediately alleged that he had

 

stolen their idea and intentionally delayed the launch of their project

 

so he could launch his. The Winklevosses later sued, winning a lawsuit

 

against Facebook for more than a million shares of Facebook stock and $20

 

million in cash.

 

Zuckerberg’s legal complications continued. Another person, Paul

 

Ceglia, alleged that he hired Zuckerberg to work on his company, Street-

 

Fax.com, at the same time that he was working on what would become

 

Facebook. In 2010, Ceglia sued, producing a document showing that Zuckerberg

 

gave him 50 percent of the company in return for a $1,000 investment.

 

 

Facebook’s lawyers assert the document is a fake.2

 

 

 

Of course, it’s true that every extremely successful company is likely to

 

encounter legal challenges. After all, once millions or even billions of dollars

 

are involved, many people will want a piece of ownership. But many of the

 

problems and huge settlements encountered by Facebook were avoidable.

 

Zuckerberg was accepting money to work on the Winklevosses’ social

 

networking program while simultaneously developing his own competing

 

program. This was a clear scenario for conflict. It was inevitable that

 

his motives would come into question—especially when he launched a

 

competing site a mere few days before his employers planned to. It may

 

have seemed to Zuckerberg like a mere gig for him to pick up a few extra

 

dollars, but whenever you’re working on another company’s projects, you

 

are responsible for maintaining its trade secrets. Moreover, it’s likely that

 

Zuckerberg was laboring on a “work-for-hire” basis, meaning that anything

 

he produced while working for them—such as computer code—in fact

 

belonged to them. That could have been another area of conflict.

 

But perhaps the biggest problem was that in his eagerness to raise the

 

money he needed to launch, Zuckerberg gave away a huge percentage

 

of the company. He failed to get any kind of legal advice that might have

 

helped him structure an agreement that would have delayed putting a

 

percentage value on Saverin’s investment (such as until the first round of

 

financing) or that would have made clear how Saverin’s percentage would

 

be diluted.

 

As the Facebook example proves, simple college-dorm agreements can

 

later become the basis for extremely serious stock ownership battles.

 

Even though most of those involved with Facebook’s founding eventually

 

got fabulously rich, the complications arising from their lack of legal

 

foresight created tremendous problems, strained friendships, and led to

 

legal battles and settlements worth millions—even billions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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