Tag: Mark Zuckerberg

  • Mark Zuckerberg serenades wife on 40th birthday

    Mark Zuckerberg serenades wife on 40th birthday

    Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg has surprised guests at his wife Priscilla Chan’s 40th birthday celebration by swapping his customary casual attire for a sparkling blue jumpsuit, reminiscent of a striking outfit worn by American singer-songwriter Benson Boone at the Grammy Awards.

    Guests at the festive event were taken aback when Zuckerberg made a dramatic entrance in a classic tuxedo. 

    However, the Meta CEO became the centre of attention when he playfully revealed the jumpsuit underneath. 

    Read Also: Mark Zuckerberg accepts Elon Musk’s cage match challenge

    With assistance from two aides, Zuckerberg tore away the tuxedo to unveil the shimmering ensemble, mirroring Boone’s own show-stopping moment during his performance of “Beautiful Things” at the Grammys. 

    The surprise elicited laughter and applause from the audience, who were clearly delighted by the tech mogul’s bold choice. 

    To add to the celebratory mood, Zuckerberg performed a song for Chan, making the moment even more special for the couple.

    Zuckerberg on Instagram wrote: “Your wife only turns 40 once! Shoutout to @bensonboone for the jumpsuit and new single”.

  • Zuckerberg drops song with T-Pain to celebrate wife on dating anniversary

    Zuckerberg drops song with T-Pain to celebrate wife on dating anniversary

    Founder of Facebook and Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, has released a special cover of the rap hit “Get Low” to celebrate his wife, Priscilla Chan, on their dating anniversary.

    The couple has been together since 2003 and married in 2012. 

    This year, Zuckerberg decided to celebrate his dating anniversary with her in a more special way.

    Collaborating with American music star Faheem Rashad Najm popularly known as T-Pain, Zuckerberg recorded the track under the band name “Z-Pain,” sharing that the song holds sentimental value from the couple’s college days.

    The 40-year-old billionaire shared on Instagram, “Get Low was playing when I first met Priscilla at a college party, so every year we listen to it on our dating anniversary. 

    Read Also: PHOTOS: Mark Zuckerberg unveils impressive statue of his wife Priscilla Chan

    “This year I worked with T-Pain on our own version of this lyrical masterpiece.” The song is available on Spotify, with Zuckerberg signing off his post with “Love you P,” referencing his wife.

    The Instagram post included a photo of the lyrics, an album cover of Zuckerberg and T-Pain both holding acoustic guitars, and snapshots from the recording session.

    Chan’s reaction, captured on Zuckerberg’s Instagram story, shows her laughing and calling the tribute “so romantic.”

    Reflecting on the song’s nostalgic pull, she said, “21 years later, I can’t get quite as low, but it brings back a lot of fun memories.”

    T-Pain, whose real name is Faheem Najm, also celebrated the collaboration, posting, “Z-Pain has arrived … Get Low by Zuck and me out now.”

    Get Low was originally released in 2002 by Lil Jon and The East Side Boyz.

  • Under 30s as game changers

    Mark Zuckerberg. That is one name that comes to mind as an innovator, pacesetter and exploring entrepreneurship at its best.Nigerian youths desirous of greater heights have begun to map out strategies on discovering their potentials. These are some of the revelations from this weeks, celebration of the International World Youths Skills day in Lagos, Yetunde Oladeinde reports.

    For young people, the future holds a lot of promise. This is the time to dream big and aspire for great heights as game changers, pace setters and innovators in different areas of life. That was the scenario last Monday at Four Point Hotel, Lekki, Lagos, for the 2019 Sustainable Solutions Conference to mark World Youths Skills Day.

    The hall was filled to the brim. Here, youth entrepreneurs and aspiring entrepreneurs listened with rapt attention, sought answers to burning issues and looked for clues at the feet of the masters; those who have survived and conquered the terrain.

    CEO WeForGood, Temitope Ade Peters, set the tone for the event with her address, informing that the event marked the first phase of 30 under 30 Project and it was a way of redefining the unemployment challenges in Africa.

    “The 2019 Sustainable Solutions Conference has been put together to commemorate the UN World Youth Skills Day. According to the United Nations, young people are almost three times more likely to be unemployed than adults and they are continuously exposed to lower quality of jobs, greater labour market inequalities, and longer and more insecure school-to-work transition. This is one reality we cannot continue to allow to play out unchallenged.”

    Ade-Peters added that “this has formed the foundation on which WeForGood International has adopted the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as its roadmap for effecting desired changes. By demanding an all-inclusive multifaceted approach, the SDGs provide us with a viable roadmap for tackling identified challenges related to poverty, infrastructure, innovation, and environmental sustainability which are key elements for building a better Africa.”

    Making significant strides against many odds. That was the crux of Olutosin Adebowale’s entrepreneurial journey. “I would say that being purpose-driven is key to driving sustainable solutions. I don’t have a module but I have a story to tell. I am a survivor of domestic violence.”

    Adebowale went down memory lane to recall how she was beaten and battered by her husband, treated badly at work and all these experiences began to take a toll on her productivity and self-esteem. “I was treated like trash. There were days when I was beaten with my baby and I would have to hide under the bed. I felt like trash but told myself that I needed to turn this around. I came up with purpose, not just for me alone but for other women in my shoes. I was driven by those slaps to create a purpose and started using trash to make beautiful things. The more I created those things the better I felt. At a point, I created Africa and I said to it, ‘you Africa, I am going to go all over you and I did that.’”

    Interestingly, while she was going through the violence and trauma of violence, Adebowale kept writing poems that were motivational about her plight. “I wrote a lot of poems, telling others that their voices can liberate them. Now, I use Facebook as my supermarket. I believe so much in sustainability. We have to put our people before profit in whatever we do. In the last three years, we have been able to build three houses from the money we make from trash. The only regret I have is that I started late, in my 40s. I didn’t have a bank account, no passport and survival was number one on my list. Today, I am proud of my efforts, making treasures from waste.”

    CEO Mitimeth, Achenyo Idachaba Obaro, talked about how she was inspired to research into how to convert water hyacinth weeds to wealth. “I had a burden to move back to Nigeria and do something at the grassroots as well as do something positive for the environment. It was after my research at Ibadan that I stumbled on water hyacinth.” Achenyo added that “my mission was to do an artisan economy. So, I zeroed in on the handicraft sector. I went to Sabo, where the northerners are based in Ibadan. I went from shed to shed demonstrating what I wanted. I was directed to a man’s shed, Mallam Yahaya, but there was a language barrier. Luckily, some children came to the rescue. That was how it started and every Saturday I sat there learning the skills. I knew that I wanted to transfer skills, empower communities and I was in a better position to take these skills and transfer.”

    Happily, she informed that it’s been a period of co-creating with the people in the communities, her costumers and partnering with other institutions who underwrite this training with prerequisite skills. ”Even if we run out of water hyacinth, we are exploring other sources like banana fibre, bamboo for aesthetics and so on. Eight years on, we are ploughing back the profit and we have trained over 400 people while 80 artisans have been integrated into our supply chain.”

    For CEO Pearl Recycling, a computer engineer, Olamide Babajide, who has also carved a niche for herself in the sustainable solution space converting used tyres and other wastes to furniture and décor: “I stumbled on it in 2012 when I travelled to the UAE for an assignment and I bought some décor which I brought home. I later discovered that they were made from waste and I was angry. I told myself that we had so much waste in Nigeria that I could work with.”

    She continued: ‘I am a naturally creative person and I also come from a generation of wood carvers. I was open to learning and relearning. I wasn’t rigid.”

    On his part, CEO Swiftthink, Ayoola Jolayemi, talked about his experience working with young entrepreneurs, getting data and documentation to improve their businesses.

    “In 2007, I was working on some projects and I found that young people were struggling to find their feet. In 2009, we started Swiftthink to help young people craft their narratives properly. While I was doing this, three things occurred to me: ‘what questions are young people asking, what need I am meeting and what problems am I solving?’

    While that was going on, Jolayemi found that the chunk of the people making impact were old people and he kept wondering where the young people were. “In 2014, we created a platform for young people and about 54,000 young people were impacted. In 2016, we set up a business sustainability platform every Thursday. It was a clinic where you meet with experts. We have set aside 3.5b per cent of our profit to support this in the last five years.”

    Nigeria, he said, is a young country and it is important to have a good plan for the next generation. “If we don’t take care of our young people, we are on a time bomb. Young people should also be ready to put in the work to get its worth. I have an engineering school and I have been advising SMEs owned by young people. We empowered over 600 students between 2012 and 2015. Then the narrative was about us. But when we changed the narratives to impact on the people, things changed rapidly and between 2015 and 2019, we have empowered 10,744 students.”

    According to the CEO Green Energy and Biofuels, Femi Oye, who describes himself as a social entrepreneur: ”This is a different breed of entrepreneur that works not to just build brand but we work to build trust. So, in the social entrepreneurship space, our currency is trust. When you build trust, then you will suddenly see big brands now coming behind you and then you can leap frog. This way you would be riding on the shoulder of giants. The problem we have as young people is what we have been sold to. Before now, wealth is being created based on the knowledge you have and the education that you have accumulated, intellect and big grammar that you can blow. But now, all that has moved into the palm, that is why you must work hard, use your hands to work to create wealth today.”

    Oye went on to explain: ”If the growth on your outside is higher than the growth that you have on the inside, then the end has come. So, you have to invest first in yourself, develop your internal capacity. Know what we call long-suffering, perseverance, develop your tenacity and understand what delayed gratification is all about. You need to hang around people they would call stingy guys, those who won’t just lavish money at weekends. Those who won’t use Gucci and designers because you have a purpose that you are pursuing.”

    He advised the young entrepreneurs to have a focus of who they want to be and how to achieve their dreams. “Don’t follow those earning big money when you have a multi billion naira company that you want to build. Some want to eat and die, while others want to feed generations. You must know where you belong. When you develop that, then you would begin to attract the right people that would give you the right advice; then you can scale it.

    Oye continued: “I actually don’t need money because if you really need money to fulfill that idea, that business, that means that God is making a mistake. Your job is to create, the business is hanging somewhere. If you can show up with the solution, your customer would pay. Personally, that was what I used. I called a group together, I showed them my solution; ‘this is what I want to do, this is how much it will cost each of you to order my products upfront.’ I did a prototype and I showed them how the biogel would work and look and they were interested. In three weeks, I raised 36 million naira from about five hundred people. I took this money to the market to create the value. I promised them two weeks to deliver but I couldn’t deliver until after four weeks. They were my community, the trusted me that I won’t run away with their money and they were patient with me. That was how I had my first breakthrough.”

    Like Oye, Chief Inspiration Officer Bruno’s Place, Brunoh Oaikhinana, took the young entrepreneurs through how he metamorphosed from the banking hall to become a barber, groomed by Bobby Eke, aka Bobby’s Signature. “Then as a banker, I was earning 500,000 naira a month and I thought it was big money. Now, my shop in Abuja, I pay 1.5 million naira monthly, the one in Ikeja City Mall, I pay 2.2 million monthly. From Lekki, we went to Abuja and we are testing the model. Now, it’s on autopilot and I have barbers that are earning over 200,000 naira a month.”

    The conference, which had over 200 attendees, came to a climax with the official announcement of the Fellows of the 30Under30Project, a blended fellowship and accelerator that WeForGood International has launched to promote skills for sustainable development, specifically for reducing unemployment on the continent, starting with Nigeria.

    The Sustainable Solutions Africa Conference was put together with the partnership of IHS Nigeria, as well as the support of the Lagos State Employment Trust Fund (LSETF), Guardian Angels, Kinabuti and Mitimeth.

  • It’s time to break up Facebook, says co-founder

    Facebook Inc co-founder and former Mark Zuckerberg roommate, Chris Hughes, has called for the break-up of the social network in an opinion piece in the New York Times.

    “We are a nation with a tradition of reining in monopolies, no matter how well intentioned the leaders of these companies may be.

    “Mark’s power is unprecedented and un-American,” Hughes wrote on Thursday.

    Facebook owns the largest social network with more than two billion users across the world.

    It also owns WhatsApp, Messenger and Instagram, each used by more than one billion people.

    Hughes co-founded Facebook in 2004 at Harvard with the company’s Chief Executive Officer Zuckerberg and Dustin Moskovitz.

    He quit Facebook in 2007 and later said in a LinkedIn post that he made half a billion dollars for his three years of work.

    “It’s been 15 years since I co-founded Facebook at Harvard, and I haven’t worked at the company in a decade.

    “But I feel a sense of anger and responsibility,” said Hughes, who later was an online strategist for Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign.

    The company did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    In one of a number of security and privacy scandals to hit the company, Facebook is accused of inappropriately sharing information belonging to 87 million users with the now-defunct British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica.

    Hughes said he last met with Zuckerberg in the summer of 2017, several months before the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke.

    “Mark is a good, kind person. But I’m angry that his focus on growth led him to sacrifice security and civility for clicks,” Hughes said.

    “And I’m worried that Mark has surrounded himself with a team that reinforces his beliefs instead of challenging them.”

    Hughes is not alone in asking for break-up of Facebook.

    Some lawmakers have called for federal privacy regulation and anti-trust action to break up big tech companies.

    Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Elizabeth Warren in March vowed to break up Facebook, Amazon.com Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google if elected U.S. president to promote competition in the tech sector.

    Reuters/NAN

  • We’ll stop interference in 2020 US presidential election, Facebook’s Zuckerberg assures

    Facebook Inc’s Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg is confident the world’s biggest social network will do better in 2020 at stopping “bad actors’’ from manipulating the U.S. presidential election.

    “We’ve learned a lot since 2016, where, obviously, we were behind where we needed to be on defences for nation

    states trying to interfere,” he said in a “Good Morning America’’ interview released on Thursday.

    “These aren’t things that you ever fully solve, right? They’re ongoing arms races, where we need to make sure

    that our systems stay ahead of the sophisticated bad actors, who are just always going to try to game them.”

    U.S. intelligence agencies say there was an extensive Russian cyber-influence operation during the 2016 campaign aimed at helping Donald Trump, a Republican, defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

    Russia has repeatedly denied the allegations.

    Zuckerberg said that he social media giant had implemented a lot of different measures since 2016 to verify any advertiser

    who is running a political ad and create an archive so anyone could see what advertisers are running, who they are targeting and how much they are paying.

    Advertising practices at Facebook, the world’s largest social network with 2.7 billion users and 56 billion dollars in annual revenue, have been in the spotlight for two years amid growing discontent over its approach to privacy and user data.

    Read Also: Obaseki’s reforms: Facebook, MainOne to invest in Edo, says Opeke

    The company said in a congressional testimony in 2018 that Russian agents created 129 events on the network during the 2016 U.S. election campaign, shedding more light on Russia’s purported disinformation drive aimed at voters.

    “At this point, (we) have probably some of the most-advanced systems of any company or government in the world for preventing the kind of tactics that Russia and now other countries, as well, have tried,” Zuckerberg said.

    Asked if he could guarantee that there would not be interference in the election, Zuckerberg said, “What I can guarantee is that they’re definitely going to try.”

  • Davido, Mark Zuckerberg, Nike Okundaye share space at Lagos art expo

    Portraitures of popular Nigerian music act Davido, Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg and female Nigerian artist Nike Okundaye, topped the list of works on display at the ” O’Sagacity art exhibition underway at the National Museum, Lagos.

    The artist/exhibitor, Sunday Olaniyi, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that each of these people inspired his works, adding that he appreciated them for their contributions to the entertainment industry.

    Olaniyi said that the portraitures of the celebrities would be handed over to them immediately after the exhibition.

    According to him, 50 art works were on display, including bead portraitures, beads, paintings, mixed media, aluminium foil and sculpture.

    Read Also: Davido hits 10 million followers on Instagram

    “I have some of my works exhibited as: Tough time never last; Moderation; Nose can’t smell the good and bad people; Mind your business; Back to sender

    “Also, Davido (OBO); Mark Zuckerberg; Chief Nike Okundaye; Fingers are not equal; Springforth; Tolerance and more.

    “Sagacity means profound wisdom and it is this sagacious wisdom embedded in the Yoruba proverbs that lie at the heart of this exhibition.

    ” The morals and values in ancient African history are the guiding forces in my works and their relevance to contemporary times.

    ” These works are presented in form of proverbs to drive home morals behind each of the art piece,” he said.

    Olaniyi said that due to the economic problems in the society, a lot of people had given up on their lives, engaging in frivolous activities and at the end becoming social defiant.

    According to him, perseverance, patience and tenacious attitude could concur all forms of discouragements, depression, loss of zeal towards life and any other circumstance anyone could be confronted with.

    ” I want people to know that patience, perseverance and tenacity are those virtues to possess to undo life challenges and be successful, likewise outstanding.

    He urged Nigerians to avail themselves of the opportunity to visit the exhibition to learn about Nigerian proverbs and virtues to possess in achieving remarkable goals in life.

    The week long art exhibition ends on Saturday.

    NAN

     

  • Kylie Jenner is world’s youngest billionaire – Forbes

    Kylie Jenner is officially the youngest self-made billionaire of all time, snatching the title from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

    Jenner, 21, was finally given the title after months of speculation on Tuesday by Forbes as it unveiled its annual billionaires list.

    At 21, she is both the youngest self-made billionaire and the youngest billionaire on Forbes’ ‘young billionaires’ list.

    Jenner has amassed a personal net worth of $1billion through her wildly successful range of make-up, Kylie Cosmetics.

    She overtakes Zuckerberg, who was 23 when he made his first billion 11 years ago in 2008.

    Now, he is the eighth richest person in the world with a fortune of $62.3billion.

    Read Also: ‘Igbo billionaires should develop human capacity’

    Jenner is the youngest in her famous, reality TV family, the Kardashians and the first to hit the billion dollar landmark.

    She was surprised by the success of her cosmetics company which was only founded in 2015 but is now worth an estimated $900million.

    Jenner, who owns a 100 percent stake in it, has separate income from endorsements and her family’s reality TV show. She also owns an impressive portfolio of real estate.

    That’s a nice pat on the back.

    Kylie Jenner who spoke on becoming the world’s youngest self-made billionaire said,

    ‘I didn’t expect anything. I did not foresee the future. But the recognition feels really good.

    ‘That’s a nice pat on the back,’ Jenner told Forbes.

    She credits her success to her enormous social media following which ensured her customer base before she made her first product.

    ‘It’s the power of social media. I had such a strong reach before I was able to start anything,’ she said, adding that she sees the company going ‘very far’.

    ‘I see Kylie Cosmetics going very far. I work really hard,’ she said.

    Her mother Kris would not rule out that she may sell the company in the future.

    ‘It’s always something that we’re willing to explore,’ she said.

    NAN

  • Instagram co-founders resign in latest Facebook executive exit

    Instagram said co-founders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger have resigned as chief executive officer and chief technical officer of the photo-sharing app owned by Facebook Inc, giving scant explanation for the move.

    The departures at Facebook’s fastest-growing revenue generator come just months after the exit of Jan Koum, co-founder of Facebook-owned messaging app, WhatsApp, media reports on Tuesday.

    These exits leave the social network without the developers behind two of its biggest services.

    They also come at a time when Facebook’s core platform is under fire for how it safeguards customer data, as it defends against political efforts to spread false information.

    Younger users increasingly prefer alternative ways to stay in touch with family and friends. Concerns over Facebook’s business sparked the biggest one-day wipeout in U.S. stock market history in July.

    Systrom wrote in a blog post on Monday that he and Krieger planned to take time off and explore “our curiosity and creativity again”.

    Their announcement came after increasingly frequent clashes with Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg over the direction of Instagram, media reported.

    In a statement, Zuckerberg described the two as “extraordinary product leaders”.

    “I’ve learned a lot working with them for the past six years and have really enjoyed it. I wish them all the best and I’m looking forward to seeing what they build next,” Zuckerberg said.

    Koum’s departure in May followed the exit of his WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton.

    That led to a reshuffling of Facebook’s executive ranks, increasing Zuckerberg’s ability to influence day-to-day operations.

    Zuckerberg ally Chris Cox, who leads product development for Facebook’s main app, gained oversight of WhatsApp and Instagram, which had been given independence when Facebook bought them.

    Read Also: Facebook, Instagram unveil tools to help users manage time

    Adam Mosseri, who had overseen Facebook’s news feed and spent a decade working closely with Zuckerberg, became Instagram’s head of product.

    Instagram and Facebook have operated independently and the two services barely mention each other.

    Regulators have pushed Facebook to improve information safeguards for individual privacy, to combat addiction to social media, and to stop misinformation or fake news.

    Zuckerberg and other leaders have been under more pressure to monitor units beyond the core social network.

    Systrom and Krieger notified the photo-sharing app’s leadership team and Facebook on Monday about their decision to leave, Instagram said.

    Their departure would be soon, it said. The media reported the move.

    Systrom and Krieger met through Stanford University and worked separately in Silicon Valley before forming Instagram in 2010.

    Facebook bought Instagram in 2012 for one billion dollars. The photo-sharing app has over one billion active monthly users and has grown by adding features such as messaging and short videos.

    In 2016, it added the ability to post slideshows that disappear in 24 hours, mimicking the “stories” feature of Snap Inc’s Snapchat.

    The photo app’s global revenue this year is likely to exceed eight billion dollars, showed data from advertising consultancy E-Marketer.

    Increased advertising on Instagram has seen the average price-per-ad across Facebook’s apps decline this year after a year of upswing. A new privacy law in Europe also has affected prices.

    Instagram had been hailed in Silicon Valley as a flashy acquisition done right, with the team kept relatively small and Systrom having the freedom to add features such as peer-to-peer messaging, video uploads and advertising.

    Video content has been a major emphasis for Facebook as it seeks to satisfy advertisers’ desire to stream more commercials online.

  • Facebook: Zuckerberg, says his own data shared by Cambridge Analytica

    The Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday told lawmakers that he was among the 87 million or so Facebook Inc users whose data was improperly shared with political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.

    But the chief executive of the world’s largest social media network pushed back on Congress members’ suggestions that users do not have enough control of their data on Facebook.

    The 33-year-old internet billionaire told U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee that “every time someone chooses to share something on Facebook, there is a control, right there. Not buried in the settings somewhere, but right there.”

    Zuckerberg’s admission that his own data made its way into the hands of Cambridge Analytica lay bare that even the company’s technologically adept founder was unable to protect his own information from parties seeking to exploit it.

    The admission underscores the problem Facebook has in persuading lawmakers that users can safeguard their own information if they carefully manage their personal settings and that further legislation governing Facebook’s use of data is unnecessary.

    “How can consumers have control over their data when Facebook does not have control over the data?” asked Representative Frank Pallone of New Jersey, the ranking Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee.

    However, Zuckerberg repeatedly defended the company’s privacy practices, saying users have control over their own data and decide what to share.

    But when asked if his data had been improperly used he replied: “Yes” and gave no further details.

    The latest estimate of affected users is up to 87 million.

    The data was improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica by an academic, who gathered data on users and their friends through a questionnaire app on Facebook.

    Facebook had shut the ability of apps to gather such data, but Zuckerberg said on Wednesday that it would
    take “many months” to complete an audit of other apps to determine if they also improperly used data.

    The House hearing followed a five-hour questioning by U.S. Senators on Tuesday, in which Zuckerberg made no further promises to support new legislation or change how the social network does business.

    Facebook shares were up 1.2 per cent on Wednesday after dips earlier in the day.

    They posted their biggest daily gain in nearly two years on Tuesday as Zuckerberg managed to deter any specific discussion about new regulations that might hamper Facebook’s ability to sell ads tailored to users’ profiles.

    “It is inevitable that there will need to be some regulation” of internet firms, Zuckerberg said on Wednesday, but he again steered away from any specifics.

    Reuters/NAN