The Facebook Effect with Mark Zuckerberg Marc Zuckerberg. Yovisto Academic Video Search. The growth and impact of Facebook is mind blowing, even for an industry that considers "overnight success" to be a long-range goal. Founded in a Harvard dorm room on February 4th 2004 by 19-year-old Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook announced in July 2010 that had it reached the milestone of 500 million registered users. Facebook isn`t just an American success story, most users are outside of the United States and half of them log on every day. Facebook has already made an irreversible impact on society, marketing and politics -- even facilitating political protests around the world in countries such as Colombia and Iran. Facebook is also changing our sense of identity: "I am on Facebook; therefore I am." Longtime Fortune magazine technology writer David Kirkpatrick chronicles the rise of Facebook in one of the most anticipated books of 2010: "The Facebook Effect: The Inside Story of the Company That Is Connecting The World." Kirkpatrick gained the full cooperation of Zuckerberg and his team in writing the book. The Facebook Effect is the first historically authoritative account of how a simple idea became one of the dominant ways to communicate on the Internet. As part of its Net@40 series, the Computer History Museum is proud to present this one-of-a-kind evening of fascinating dialogue between Zuckerberg and Kirkpatrick on the past and future of Facebook. The moderator is Guy Raz, the Peabody award-winning host of NPR`s All Things Considered Massachusetts Institute of Technology The growth and impact of Facebook is mind blowing, even for an industry that considers "overnight success" to be a long-range goal. Founded in a Harvard dorm room on February 4th 2004 by 19-year-old Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook announced in July 2010 that had it reached the milestone of 500 million registered users. Facebook isn`t just an American success story, most users are outside of the United States and half of them log on every day. Facebook has already made an irreversible impact on society, marketing and politics -- even facilitating political protests around the world in countries such as Colombia and Iran. Facebook is also changing our sense of identity: "I am on Facebook; therefore I am." Longtime Fortune magazine technology writer David Kirkpatrick chronicles the rise of Facebook in one of the most anticipated books of 2010: "The Facebook Effect: The Inside Story of the Company That Is Connecting The World." Kirkpatrick gained the full cooperation of Zuckerberg and his team in writing the book. The Facebook Effect is the first historically authoritative account of how a simple idea became one of the dominant ways to communicate on the Internet. As part of its Net@40 series, the Computer History Museum is proud to present this one-of-a-kind evening of fascinating dialogue between Zuckerberg and Kirkpatrick on the past and future of Facebook. The moderator is Guy Raz, the Peabody award-winning host of NPR`s All Things Considered facebook effect david kirkpatrick marketing story collection denmark power platform communication viral bob taylor computer to the internet of history telephone future trend service vital change constant database responsibility company application social money engineering interface government innovation engine search photos resolution high development html plugins integration iphone clipfish privacy content wikipedia policy utility monopoly useful integrity transparent privat control groups interaction friend list sharing proxies network apple device mobile app adobe ipad andoid thread google index movie timberlake justin celebrity regulation orgenisation profit non reality thinkers ceo notebook newsfeed perspectives video cnn risks new times york radio consequences games code annual developer bugs infrastructure competition entrepreneur transparency french language japan leading russia korea south china universal applications twitter iran street protest columbia hostage democratic egypt bangladesh indonesia mall pakistan block pornography values american nazi law germany holocaust spreech free global perspective culture

The Facebook Effect with Mark Zuckerberg

ID:
[video:18521] play this video
Title:
The Facebook Effect with Mark Zuckerberg
Date/Place:
2010-07-21 California
Resolution:
1280x720 (flv-player)
Category:
Computer Science
Type:
other
Language:
en
Duration:
01:33:53
Keywords:
social network facebook computer history
Description:
The growth and impact of Facebook is mind blowing, even for an industry that considers "overnight success" to be a long-range goal. Founded in a Harvard dorm room on February 4th 2004 by 19-year-old Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook announced in July 2010 that had it reached the milestone of 500 million registered users. Facebook isn`t just an American success story, most users are outside of the United States and half of them log on every day. Facebook has already made an irreversible impact on society, marketing and politics -- even facilitating political protests around the world in countries such as Colombia and Iran. Facebook is also changing our sense of identity: "I am on Facebook; therefore I am." Longtime Fortune magazine technology writer David Kirkpatrick chronicles the rise of Facebook in one of the most anticipated books of 2010: "The Facebook Effect: The Inside Story of the Company That Is Connecting The World." Kirkpatrick gained the full cooperation of Zuckerberg and his team in writing the book. The Facebook Effect is the first historically authoritative account of how a simple idea became one of the dominant ways to communicate on the Internet. As part of its Net@40 series, the Computer History Museum is proud to present this one-of-a-kind evening of fascinating dialogue between Zuckerberg and Kirkpatrick on the past and future of Facebook. The moderator is Guy Raz, the Peabody award-winning host of NPR`s All Things Considered
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