The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal

by Ben Mezrich
The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal

by Ben Mezrich

Paperback(Movie Tie-in)

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Overview

NATIONAL BESTSELLER

The Social Network, the much anticipated movie…adapted from Ben Mezrich’s book The Accidental Billionaires.” —The New York Times

Best friends Eduardo Saverin and Mark Zuckerberg had spent many lonely nights looking for a way to stand out among Harvard University’s elite, competitive, and accomplished  student body. Then, in 2003, Zuckerberg hacked into Harvard’s computers, crashed the campus network, almost got himself expelled, and was inspired to create Facebook, the social networking site that has since revolutionized communication around the world.
 
With Saverin’s funding their tiny start-up went from dorm room to Silicon Valley. But conflicting ideas about Facebook’s future transformed the friends into enemies. Soon, the undergraduate exuberance that marked their collaboration turned into out-and-out warfare as it fell prey to the adult world of venture capitalists, big money, and lawyers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307740984
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 09/28/2010
Edition description: Movie Tie-in
Pages: 260
Sales rank: 308,681
Product dimensions: 8.22(w) x 11.28(h) x 0.79(d)

About the Author

Ben Mezrich, a Harvard graduate, is the author of eleven books, including the international bestseller Bringing Down the House, which spent sixty-three weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and was made into the movie 21, starring Kevin Spacey. He is a columnist for Boston Common and a contributor to Flush magazine. Ben lives in Boston with his wife, Tonya.

Mezrich's next book, Sex on the Moon, will be published in summer 2011.

Visit the author's website at www.benmezrich.com.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1 | October 2003

It was probably the third cocktail that did the trick. It was hard for Eduardo to tell for sure, because the three drinks had come in such rapid succession—the empty plastic cups were now stacked accordion style on the windowsill behind him—that he hadn’t been able to gauge for certain when the change had occurred. But there was no denying it now, the evidence was all over him. The pleasantly warm flush to his normally sallow cheeks; the relaxed, almost rubbery way he leaned against the window—a stark contrast to his usual calcified, if slightly hunched posture; and most important of all, the easy smile on his face, something he’d practiced unsuccessfully in the mirror for two hours before he’d left his dorm room that evening. No doubt at all, the alcohol had taken effect, and Eduardo wasn’t scared anymore. At the very least, he was no longer overwhelmed with the intense urge to get the fuck out of there.

To be sure, the room in front of him was intimidating: the immense crystal chandelier hanging from the arched, cathedral ceiling; the thick red velvet carpeting that seemed to bleed right out of the regal mahogany walls; the meandering, bifurcated staircase that snaked up toward the storied, ultrasecret, catacombed upper floors. Even the windowpanes behind Eduardo’s head seemed treacherous, lit from behind by the flickering anger of a bonfire consuming most of the narrow courtyard outside, twists of flame licking at the ancient, pockmarked glass.

This was a terrifying place, especially for a kid like Eduardo. He hadn’t grown up poor—he’d spent most of his childhood being shuttled between upper-middle-class communities in Brazil and Miami before matriculating at Harvard—but he was a complete stranger to the sort of old-world opulence this room represented. Even through the booze, Eduardo could feel the insecurities rumbling deep down in the pit of his stomach. He felt like a freshman all over again, stepping into Harvard Yard for the first time, wondering what the hell he was doing there, wondering how he could possibly belong in a place like that. How he could possibly belong in a place like this.

He shifted against the sill, scanning the crowd of young men that filled most of the cavernous room. A mob, really, bunched together around the pair of makeshift bars that had been set up specifically for the event. The bars themselves were fairly shoddy—wooden tables that were little more than slabs, starkly out of character in such an austere setting—but nobody noticed, because the bars were staffed by the only girls in the room; matching, bust-heavy blondes in low-cut black tops, brought in from one of the local all-female colleges to cater to the mob of young men.

The mob, in many ways, was even more frightening than the building itself. Eduardo couldn’t tell for sure, but he guessed there had to be about two hundred of them—all male, all dressed in similar dark blazers and equally dark slacks. Sophomores, mostly; a mix of races, but there was something very similar about all the faces—the smiles that seemed so much easier than Eduardo’s, the confidence in those two hundred pairs of eyes—these kids weren’t used to having to prove themselves. They belonged. For most of them, this party—this place—was just a formality.

Eduardo took a deep breath, wincing slightly at the bitter tinge to the air. The ash from the bonfire outside was making its way through the windowpanes, but he didn’t move away from his perch against the sill, not yet. He wasn’t ready yet.

Instead, he let his attention settle on the group of blazers closest to him—four kids of medium build. He didn’t recognize any of them from his classes; two of the kids were blond and preppy-looking, like they’d just stepped off a train from Connecticut. The third was Asian, and seemed a little older, but it was hard to tell for sure. The fourth, however—African American and very polished-looking, from his grin to his perfectly coiffed hair—was definitely a senior.

Eduardo felt his back stiffen, and he glanced toward the black kid’s tie. The color of the material was all the verification Eduardo needed. The kid was a senior, and it was time for Eduardo to make

his move.

Eduardo straightened his shoulders and pushed off of the sill. He nodded at the two Connecticut kids and the Asian, but his attention remained focused on the older kid—and his solid black, uniquely decorated tie.

“Eduardo Saverin.” Eduardo introduced himself, vigorously shaking the kid’s hand. “Great to meet you.”

The kid responded with his own name, Darron something, which Eduardo filed away in the back of his memory. The kid’s name didn’t really matter; the tie alone told him everything he needed to know. The purpose of this entire evening lay in the little white birds that speckled the solid black material. The tie designated him as a member of the Phoenix-S K; he was one of twenty or so hosts of the evening’s affair, who were scattered among the two hundred sophomore men.

“Saverin. You’re the one with the hedge fund, right?”

Eduardo blushed, but inside he was thrilled that the Phoenix member recognized his name. It was a bit of an exaggeration—he didn’t have a hedge fund, he’d simply made some money investing with his brother during his sophomore summer—but he wasn’t going to correct the mistake. If the Phoenix members were talking about him, if somehow they were impressed by what they’d heard—well, maybe he had a chance.

It was a heady thought, and Eduardo’s heart started to beat a

little harder as he tried to spread just the right amount of bullshit

to keep the senior interested. More than any test he’d taken freshman or sophomore year, this moment was going to define his future. Eduardo knew what it would mean to gain entrance to the Phoenix—for his social status during his last two years of college, and for his future, whatever future he chose to chase.

Like the secret societies at Yale that had gotten so much press over the years, the Final Clubs were the barely kept secret soul of campus life at Harvard; housed in centuries-old mansions spread out across Cambridge, the eight all-male clubs had nurtured generations of world leaders, financial giants, and power brokers. Almost as important, membership in one of the eight clubs granted an instant social identity; each of the clubs had a different personality, from the ultraexclusive Porcellian, the oldest club on campus, whose members had names like Roosevelt and Rockefeller, to the prepped-out Fly Club, which had spawned two presidents and a handful of billionaires, each of the clubs had its own distinct, and instantly defining, power. The Phoenix, for its part, wasn’t the most prestigious of the clubs, but in many ways it was the social king of the hill; the austere building at 323 Mt. Auburn Street was the destination of choice on Friday and Saturday nights, and if you were a member of the Phoenix, not only were you a part of a century-old network, you also got to spend your weekends at the best parties on campus, surrounded by the hottest girls culled from schools all over the 02138 zip code.

“The hedge fund is a hobby, really,” Eduardo humbly confided as the small group of blazers hung on his words. “We focus mostly on oil futures. See, I’ve always been obsessed with the weather, and I made a few good hurricane predictions that the rest of the market hadn’t quite picked up on.”

Eduardo knew he was walking a fine line, trying to minimize the geekiness of how he’d actually outguessed the oil market; he knew the Phoenix member wanted to hear about the three hundred thousand dollars Eduardo had made trading oil, not the nerdish obsession with meteorology that had made the trades possible. But Eduardo also wanted to show off a little; Darron’s mention of his “hedge fund” only confirmed what Eduardo had already suspected, that the only reason he was in that room in the first place was his reputation as a budding businessman.

Hell, he knew he didn’t have much else going for him. He wasn’t an athlete, didn’t come from a long line of legacies, and certainly wasn’t burning up the social scene. He was gawky, his arms were a little too long for his body, and he only really relaxed when he drank. But still, he was there, in that room. A year late—most people were “punched” during the fall of their sophomore year, not as juniors like Eduardo—but he was there just the same.

The whole punch process had taken him by surprise. Just two nights before, Eduardo had been sitting at his desk in his dorm room, working on a twenty-page paper about some bizarre tribe that lived in the Amazonian rain forest, when an invitation had suddenly appeared under his door. It wasn’t anything like a fairy-tale golden ticket—of the two hundred mostly sophomores who were invited to the first punch party, only twenty or so would emerge as new members of the Phoenix— but the moment was as thrilling to Eduardo as when he had opened his Harvard acceptance letter. He’d been hoping for a shot at one of the clubs since he’d gotten to Harvard, and now, finally, he’d gotten that shot.

Now it was just up to him—and, of course, the kids wearing

the black, bird-covered ties. Each of the four punch events—like tonight’s meet-and-greet cocktail party—was a sort of mass interview. After Eduardo and the rest of the invitees were sent home to their various dorms spread across the campus, the Phoenix members would convene in one of the secret rooms upstairs to deliberate their fates. After each event, a smaller and smaller percentage of the punched would get the next invitation—and slowly, the two hundred would be weeded down to twenty.

If Eduardo made the cut, his life would change. And if it took some creative “elaboration” of a summer spent analyzing barometric changes and predicting how those changes would affect oil distribution patterns —well, Eduardo wasn’t above a little applied creativity.

“The real trick is figuring out how to turn three hundred thousand into three million.” Eduardo grinned. “But that’s the fun of hedge funds. You get to be real inventive.”

He delved into the bullshit with full enthusiasm, carrying the whole group of blazers with him. He’d honed his bullshit skills over numerous prepunch parties as a freshman and sophomore; the trick was to forget that this was no longer a dry run—that this was the real thing. In his head, he tried to pretend he was back at one of those less important mixers, when he wasn’t yet being judged, when he wasn’t trying to end up on some all-important list. He could remember one, in particular, that had gone incredibly well; a Caribbean-themed party, with faux palm trees and sand on the floor. He tried to put himself back there—remembering the less imposing details of the decor, remembering how simple and easy the conversation had come. Within moments, he felt himself relaxing even more, allowing himself to become enrapt in his own story, the sound of his own voice.

He was back at that Caribbean party, down to the last detail. He remembered the reggae music bouncing off the walls, the sound of steel drums biting at his ears. He remembered the rum-based punch, the girls in flowered bikinis.

He even remembered the kid with the mop of curly hair who had been standing in a corner of the room, barely ten feet away from where he was now, watching his progress, trying to get up the nerve to follow his lead and approach one of the older Phoenix kids before it was too late. But the kid had never moved from the corner; in fact, his self- defeating awkwardness had been so palpable, it had acted like a force field, carving out an area of the room around him, a sort of reverse magnetism, pushing anyone nearby away.

Eduardo had felt a tinge of sympathy at the time—because he had recognized that kid with the curly hair—and because there was no way in hell a kid like that was ever going to get into the Phoenix. A kid like that had no business punching any of the Final Clubs—God only knew what he had been doing there at the prepunch party in the first place. Harvard had plenty of little niches for kids like that; computer labs, chess guilds, dozens of underground organizations and hobbies catering to every imaginable twist of social impairment. One look at the kid, and it had been obvious to Eduardo that he didn’t know the first thing about the sort of social networking one had to master to get into a club like the Phoenix.

But then, as now, Eduardo had been too busy chasing his dream to spend much time thinking about the awkward kid in the corner.

Certainly, he had no way of knowing, then or now, that the kid with the curly hair was one day going to take the entire concept of a social network and turn it on its head. That one day, the kid with the curly hair struggling through that prepunch party was going to change Eduardo’s life more than any Final Club ever could.

Chapter 2 | Harvard Yard

Ten minutes past one in the morning, and something had gone terribly wrong with the decorations. It wasn’t just that the ribbons of white- and blue-colored crepe paper attached to the walls had started to droop —one of them bowing so low that its taffeta-like curls threatened to overwhelm the oversize punch bowl perched below—but now the brightly designed decorative posters that covered much of the bare space between the crepe paper had also begun to unhinge and drop to the floor at an alarming rate. In some areas, the beige carpet had almost vanished beneath piles of glossy computer-printed pages.

On closer inspection, the catastrophe of the decorations made more sense; the peeling strips of packing tape that held the colored posters and crepe-paper ribbons in place were clearly visible, and what’s more, a sheen of condensation was slowly working the strips of tape free as the heat from the overworked radiators that lined the walls played havoc with the hastily constructed ambience.

The heat was necessary, of course, because it was New England in October. The banner hanging from the ceiling above the dying posters was all warmth—alpha epsilon pi, meet and greet, 2003—but there was no way a banner could compete with the ice that had begun to form on the oversize windows lining the back wall of the cavernous lecture room. All in all, the decorating committee had done what they could with the room—normally home to numerous philosophy and history classes, lodged as it was deep into the fifth floor of an aging building in Harvard Yard. They’d carted away the row upon row of scuffed wooden chairs and dilapidated desks, tried to cover up the bland, chipped walls with posters and crepe, and put up the banner, concealing most of the ugly, oversize fluorescent ceiling lights. Topping it all off, there was the coup de grâce; an iPod player attached to two enormous and expensive- looking speakers set on the little stage at the head of the room, where the professor’s lectern usually stood.

Interviews

Q&A:

BEN MEZRICH/ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES Q&A FOR BN.COM:

1)You seem to be drawn to these larger-than-life, fast-paced, and rags-to-riches stories of young entrepreneurs - also known as "lad lit." How did you discover the amazing story of the creation of Facebook?

I've always been intrigued by stories about brilliant kids who stumble into something spectacular - and in a way, THE ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES was something I stumbled into as well. It started with an email I received at 2 in the morning through my fan site, from a Harvard senior; in the email, the kid said he had a friend with a story I might be interested in. At the time, I knew very little about the history of Facebook, but I loved using the site; I agreed to meet this college kid and his friend at a local bar here in Boston. When I showed up, I was introduced to Eduardo Saverin, who had co-founded the company in his Harvard dorm room - and from the minute he started telling me his story, I knew this was going to be my next book.

2) Harvard is a central character in THE ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES. You provide a bird's-eye view of life on campus as well as the machinations behind the secretive Finals Clubs. How did you gain access to the Clubs? Has Harvard changed much since you attended and was there anything that you learned about the university while writing the book that surprised you?

Part of the thrill for me in writing this book was that I really feel connected to these kids because I was a lot like them. Not anywhere near as smart - but I was a geeky, gawky kid trying to navigate the same odd social structures of Harvard. To get deep inside this story -as I do with all my books - I immersed myself in that world again, and spent many hours on campus. I managed to get in with a great group of Final Club members, who snuck me into secret parties, got me deep behind the crimson ropes. Harvard hasn't really changed that much since I was there - except for Facebook itself, which has become a dominant part of the social world on every college campus.

3) Loss of innocence is a recurring theme throughout THE ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES. How did Facebook begin? How did its abrupt rise change the relationship between the two best friends, Eduardo Saverin and Mark Zuckerberg?

Simply put, Facebook began with a college prank. Late one night, Mark Zuckerberg hacked into Harvard's computer system, pulling up the photos of every girl on campus to create a sort of "hot or not" website, a ratable database of all the female students - subsequently, crashing the university's servers and nearly getting himself kicked out of school. Realizing he was on to something interesting, he went to his friend Eduardo Saverin, and together they hashed out a plan to use what they had learned from this prank to create an exclusive site that sort of mimicked an online Final Club - a social setting where guys like them could be part of a social scene that would eventually link every kid on campus. At first, it was just the two of them, best friends in a college dorm room - but as the company exploded, rapidly becoming more popular than either of them could ever imagine - it tore them apart.

4) Mark Zuckerberg is driven, brilliant, and also the planet's youngest billionaire. Do you believe he is the next Bill Gates? How do you think Facebook will adapt to new technological arrivals such as Twitter?

I think Mark Zuckerberg could definitely be the next Bill Gates. I think Facebook is one of the most significant, society changing advances in the past ten years; I really feel that we've gone from the Village to the City to Facebook- our social lives have gone digital because of what Mark Zuckerberg created. Going forward, the question is, how will Facebook continue to meld itself to changes in technology and population. Twitter is growing fast, but Facebook is making efforts to adjust to incorporate Twitter-like features. But Twitter isn't the all encompassing pastime that Facebook is; people use Twitter, but they live on Facebook. That's the significant difference.

5) Sean Parker (co-founder of Napster and Plaxo) provides an entrée into the VC (venture capitalist) world of Silicon Valley for Mark Zuckerberg and Eduardo Saverin. What was Sean Parker's goal in pursuing the Facebook team?

Sean Parker is this brilliant, amazing wild child - he's the kid who co-founded Napster, then co-founded Plaxo, then helped bring Facebook from a dorm room project to a billion dollar company. He discovered Facebook almost by accident - but he was already looking for his next billion dollar idea, and he already knew it was going to be something in the social network area. He was one of the first people to recognize the genius behind what Mark had done and he did everything he could to take Facebook to the next level.

6) There is a fascinating scene between Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss (who had hired Mark Zuckerberg to do programming work on their forthcoming website) and Harvard President Larry Summers. The twins want to file a formal complaint with the university about Mark's Facebook launch. Can you describe Summers's reticence? Why would the university not get involved in the dispute?

Yes, the Winklevoss twins - 6'5", identical Olympic Rowers and members of one of Harvard's most elite Finals Clubs - had hired Mark Zuckerberg to work on their own website, and thus believed that Mark had stolen their idea. They managed to get a meeting with Summers, who was President of Harvard at the time. They wanted Summers to get involved - to investigate Mark and see if he had stolen from them. But Summers threw their charge back in their face. Summers decided it was a dispute between students that had nothing to do with him or the University.

7) What were your methods of research for ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES?

I write narrative nonfiction and all of my books reflect my writing style - I call it "immersion journalism" and am usually drawn into the story by the participants. I provide the reader an inside view of these larger-than-life characters and the astounding circumstances that create their story. To be clear about my process: ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES is a dramatic account based on dozens of interviews (including Eduardo Saverin), hundreds of sources, and thousands of pages of documents, including records from court proceedings. When a number of different - and often contentious - opinions about some events that took place in the book I re-created the scenes in the book based on the information I uncovered from documents and interviews. I used my best judgment as to what version most fits the documentary record

8) Kevin Spacey is producing the movie version of THE ACCIDENTAL BILLIONAIRES. How is the movie progressing and have you been involved at all? Who would you like to see cast as Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, and Sean Parker?

The movie is moving along nicely; hopefully we will shoot later this year. Kevin Spacey, Dana Brunetti, Scott Rudin, and Mike Deluca are producing for Columbia/Sony, and Aaron Sorkin adapted the screenplay. They are in the process of signing a director now, and I think it will go very fast from there. There are a lot of great actors whose names have been bandied about, and I like them all - Michael Cera, Shia LaBeouf, etc. What's great about the story is that these kids are so young, and the Harvard setting is so unique. I'm certain Sorkin has done a fantastic job, as he's a genius, and I can't wait to see this put together.

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