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Digital Media Conference West

by julieblaustein on October 31, 2009

By Julie Blaustein

Picture 6

Jay Adelson of Digg and Mike Vorhaus of Magid Advisors

Jay Adelson of Digg and Mike Vorhaus of Magid Advisors

Digital Media Conference West, a one day conference held at the Kabuki Hotel in San Francisco, focused on a wide range of topics  including online video, social media, investments, online advertising, mobile entertainment, mobile apps, the future of news media and the relationship between Hollywood and Silicon Valley. There were also a number of well known digital media  leaders there to speak including Jay Adelson of Digg and Craig Newmark of Craig’s List along with other great speakers from the industry.

Bill Trancer of Hitwise and Nick Veronis of Veronis Suhler Stevenson kicked off the conference with their view of the trends of the Internet. Bill’s trends can be found in his book Click: What Millions of People are Doing and Why it Matters along with his blog I Love Data which he gave a few shout-outs about. His post about the competition of Twitter vs Facebook provides a clear analysis of the trends, spelling out his observation that Facebook, with its 6% of all U.S. Internet visits, is not threatened by Twitter.  Nick Veronis spoke of ad spending trends where $210 billion is allocated to digital advertising, search is huge and growing with over $11 billion while classified spending has been reduced by 50% most likely due to competition with free services such as Craig’s List. The main problem according to Nick Veronis is, “Distribution used to be the issue, now its gaining the attention of users”

It was like hanging out in a cafe during Jay Adelson of Digg’s talk with Mike Vorhaus of Magid Advisors, a research-based strategic consulting firm (founded in 1957!). Jay shared amusing incidents such as when he was hailed back west from NYC to return to the Digg helm and his biggest concern was the transportation of his daughter’s Gecko. He “twittered” for information inquiring how does one transport a Gecko and was blown away by the amount of knowledge his followers shared with him about Geckos – a testament to the power of Twitter. His first hire was a coder from eLance who turned into a full timer. Digg would have been Dig if Disney didn’t already own it. He isn’t thrilled with the depiction of him as despising VC’s as detailed in an entire chapter on him called Fuck the Sweater Vests by Sarah Lacy in Once Your Lucky, Twice Your Good. He does prefer Angel funding. Digg is hiring and allows dogs, even parakeets in the office. And he shared “secrets” including that Digg is releasing new features in a week and focusing on verticals, content types and also on multiple levels of promotions.

Chuck Fishman of Cisco and Craig Newmark of Craig's List

Chuck Fishman of Cisco and Craig Newmark of Craig's List

The agenda was packed with great content yet it seemed to always come back to Facebook, Twitter and MySpace in each and every conversation. Lunch was served along with a chat from Craig Newmark who still goes by his title of Customer and Service Rep from 12 years ago when he first started the site. He was candid, honest and a delight to listen to even though folks were having lunch while he spoke. His main concern is about information not being shared. He is so concerned that he gave out his Twitter, Facebook and even his email address to all, suggesting they contact him in the afternoons when he isn’t dealing with spam. Great information was shared during the conference by the speakers and through the Twitter hashtag #DMCW that was displayed front and center on the big screen on stage with the speakers. Attendees at the conference and off-site kept the live stream fresh. What were they sharing? They shared when they  arrived for the “party.” They promoted their speaking engagements coming up. They shared who they were looking forward to hearing speak. They provided links to information such as the Pew Study on Twitter Users tweeted by @nedsherman. They gave a play-by-play of who is speaking and about what. And they promoted themselves.

Check out more about the Digital Media Conference West and Buzz on its Twitter Feed at #DMCW

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Austin Diggs Diggnation at SXSW

by Brian Solis on March 29, 2009

words and pictures by Brian Solis

And you thought the TechSet + Windows Mobile Rat Pack at the Belmont party was slammed…

Digg hosted a live episode of Diggnation at Stubbs BBQ during SXSW Interactive with thousands of the show’s most ardent fans in attendance. It was simply mind blowing. The cult-like phenomenon that served as the undercurrent for our Geek culture is now broaching pop status. Kevin Rose and Alex Albrecht represent a new genre of celebrity and if you don’t believe me, just ask any one of Kevin Rose’s 375,000 friends on Twitter.

I’ll let the pictures tell the rest of the story…

Jim Louderback takes the stage

Alex Albrecht and Rad Zach, Zach Luye

LaLa, Lara Doucette

Alex and Kevin rev up the crowd

Jay Adelson, Alex Albrecht, Kevin Rose

Alex Albrecht

Jeremiah Owyang, Kevin Rose and Brian Solis

Sarah Austin and Zach Luye

Diggnation

Diggnation towers over the crowd

Lara Doucette and Brian Solis

Tamar Weinberg

For more pictures from Diggnation @SXSW 2009, please visit my album on Flickr.

Please read:

The Human Network: The Social Economy is Influenced by How We Communicate Online & Offline (My philosophical analysis of what makes SXSW so special)

Which parties did you hit or miss?

Check em off at Diddit: SXSW Interactive Festival 2009 Party List

Pictures:

SXSW – The Calm Before the Storm

SXSW Day One

TechSet + Windows Mobile Rat Pack 2.0 Party

SXSW Day Two

Diggnation Party at Stubbs

We Flashmob the Driskill

AllHat @Allens Boots

Brian Solis Book Signing @SXSW

Are PR Agencies a Dying Breed: Brian Solis joins the panel

Kirtsy, AllTop Party @Allens Boots

Pool 2.0 – SocialMediaClub

SXSW Day Four

Paul Nelson Performs in the TechSet + Windows Mobile Blogger Lounge

Dell Adamo Premiers at SXSW

Power Geek Girl Tweetup in the TechSet + Windows Mobile Blogger Lounge

Rackspace + Scoble Party

Blurb + Mashable Party

SXSW Day Five

WorldSings.com

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Twitter
, FriendFeed, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Plaxo, Plurk, Identi.ca, BackType, or Facebook

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Rock Band the Music Video by Randi Zuckerberg

by Brian Solis on March 11, 2008

by Brian Solis

I absolutely adore Randi Zuckerberg. I think she’s incredibly creative and talented. (DISCLOSURE: She’s my friend.)

With that said, Randi rewrote the lyrics to Roxanne to idolize Rock Band and short a video featuring Robert Scoble, Jay Adelson, Dave McClure and David Spark. (DISCLOSURE: They’re friends too.)

Here’s the link.

On a side note, I think Rock Band has my vote for this year’s “Twitter” of SXSW.

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Rumor: Microsoft and Google Digg Deep

by Brian Solis on March 7, 2008

by Brian Solis


Kevin Rose, Shot at the Worlds Collide Party

About a few months ago, Digg hired a-list investment bankers Allen & Co. to shop the company to potential buyers.

Today, I read that two companies may be ready to offer between $200-$300 for the user-generated news service. Who’s ponying up? Rumor has it that both Google and Microsoft are mulling over offers.

No doubt that Digg is a fantastic service. Other competitors, including Mixx (recommendations) and Hubdub (predictive markets) are starting to showcase innovative and engaging formats however, that might make this the right time for Digg to sell and help it stay in its leadership role.

Fred Wilson pondered whether or not Digg’s rapid rise to stardom may be flattening, “A slowing growth rate doesn’t mean that Digg is a bad business. It’s probably becoming a better business because they are probably monetizing it better than ever these days.”

Here’s Digg’s US unique visitors:

He suggests that the New York Times may be a better suitor for Digg since it proved it could turn an investment into a profit center as it has with About.com.

Either way, this will work out for the team over at Digg and free them up to focus on Revision3, Pownce, and the next big thing.

UPDATE: Digg responds, says rumors are false. See Jay Adelson’s post on the Digg blog.

“Normally our policy is to not comment about things like this, but this morning’s rumors about a bidding war involving Google and Microsoft have created such a stir we feel compelled to tell you all directly that they are completely inaccurate.

Sorry to burst any drama theories, but they aren’t true. We remain focused on improving Digg and rolling out great features.”

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The Lobby is Lobbycon for the Future of New Media

by Brian Solis on October 26, 2007

by Brian Solis

The conference circuit is abuzz this time around with the latest addition to the lineup. But, before you hit your head and say, “NOT ANOTHER CONFERENCE PLEASE,” don’t worry, you’re not invited.

The Lobby, dubbed a new media salon, is currently underway in Hawaii and it boasts some of the most powerful, influential, and visionary people from a variety, but intertwined, industries – with an emphaisis Web 2.0.

Organized by August Capital’s David Hornik, the pseudo conference/schmooze fest takes place, of all places, on the Big Island of Hawaii.

The Lobby, in a sense, has built a conference around lobbycon, the valuable conversations and newly forged relationships that take place in the hallways outside of any given conference. Over the years, lobbycon as evolved to become its own mashup that combines the official attendees of any given conference with those who simply show up to be part of the action without paying (or being invited) to participate. It is the lobby, however, where the deals are made.

This year’s Web 2.0 Summit demonstrated the incredible volume, allure, and velocity of lobbycon, creating an almost mob-like crowd that spilled into every corner of the Palace hotel including nearby bars and restaurants. It was something truly unique to witness.

Here’s the official conference description:

Why do you attend conferences? Is it to learn about industry trends or hear keynote speakers or watch powerpoint presentations? Or do you attend conferences to spend time in the lobby? In a great conference, the conversation in the lobby is the content. The Lobby aims to turn the traditional conference on its head. There will be no panels, no keynotes, no distractions from the real task at hand – engaging in meaningful conversation and building deeper relationships with other thought-leaders in the new media universe. For two and a half days, the individuals driving innovation and strategic development throughout the online media world will gather for an extended conversation.

Kara Swisher, who seems to be everywhere these days, described her initial experience this way:

So what was the talk last night at the opening cocktail party? The Facebook deal, of course, with most people being alternately incredulous, dubious and in awe of the $15 billion valuation that Mark Zuckerberg snagged from Microsoft.

In general, people were worried about the impact on their own companies, most agreeing that it would make the bubble even more bubblicious and that it marked the return of that frothy but queasy feeling of the first Internet bubble when AOL somehow managed to grab Time Warner in a deal that, as it turned out, will now live in infamy.

Honestly, I would truly have enjoyed participating at The Lobby, and no, not just because it’s in Hawaii, well maybe just a little bit. I believe the future of online media shouldn’t be dictated by only industry players, movers, and shakers. It needs different voices, congressmen if you will, to represent citizen journalists and consumers who are equally qualified to contribute to its direction.

So, who was invited? The list is below, courtesy of Valleywag:

Brian Solis, bub.blicio.us, PR 2.0 (OK, not really, but maybe next year)
Frank Addante, CEO, the Rubicon Project
Jay Adelson, CEO, Digg
J Allard, VP, Microsoft
Dave Alles, Media Center Extender team, Microsoft
Dr. Phillip Alvelda, Chairman and CEO, MobiTV
Chris Anderson, Editor In Chief, Wired Magazine
Marc Andreessen, Founder, Ning
Andrew Anker, SVP, Six Apart
Mike Arrington, Founder and Editor In Chief, TechCrunch
Adam Bain, EVP Technology, Fox Interactive Media
Mitchell Baker, CEO, Mozilla
Jim Bankoff, Former EVP Product, AOL
Raanan Bar-Cohen, Director of Product Strategy, Dow Jones
Jeff Barr, Web Services Evangelist, Amazon
Peter Barrett, CTO, MSTV, Microsoft
John Battelle, CEO, FM Publishing
Joe Belfiore, Corporate VP, eHome Group, Microsoft
Chris Bell, Director of iTunes, Apple
Rob Bennett, GM, MSN Entertainment, Microsoft
Brad Berens, Editor, iMedia
Shana Berger, Founder, Readymade
Barak Berkowitz, CEO, Six Apart
Jeff Berman, SVP, MySpace (Fox)
Jeff Bezos, CEO, Amazon
Angela Biever, Vice President, Intel Capital
Jeff Blackburn, VP Worldwide Business Development, Amazon
Michael Bloom, VP, Digital Music, MTV Networks
Shelby Bonnie, Co-Founder, CNET
Steve Boom, SVP, Broadband & Mobile, Yahoo
Emmanuelle Borde, Vice President, Sony Pictures Digital
Danah Boyd, PhD Candidate, School of Information (SIMS) at Berkeley
Paul Bricault, SVP, William Morris Consultants
Sergey Brin, Co-Founder & President, Technology, Google
Don Buckley, SVP of Interactive Marketing, Warner Brothers
Michael Buhr, Sr. Director of Corporate Strategy, eBay
Brett Bullington, Board Member, Flickr, JotSpot, Oodle, Wink
Katie Burke Mitic, VP, Mareting and Operations, Skyrider
Stewart Butterfield, Co-Founder, Flickr (Yahoo)
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur in Action, Sequoia Capital
Garrett Camp, Co-Founder, StumbleUpon
John Caplan, President, Ford Models
Sean Carey, EVP of Digital Distribution and Production Acquisition, Sony
David Carson, CEO, Heavy
Mike Cassidy, CEO, Xfire (Viacom)
Stan Chudnowski, CTO, Ooga Labs
Jeff Clavier, Founder, SoftTech VC
Betty Cohen, President and CEO, Lifetime Entertainment Services
June Cohen, Director of Media, TED Conference
Kevin Cohen, SVP, Strategic Planning, Turner Broadcasting Systems
Matt Cohler, VP Strategy and Business Operations, Facebook
Beth Comstock, President, Digital Media and Market Developement NBC Universal
Tony Conrad, CEO, Sphere
Tom Conrad, CTO, Pandora
Kevin Conroy, EVP of Product, Marketing and Distribution, AOL
Andrew Conru, Founder and CEO, Friend Finder Network
Ron Conway, Founder, Angel Investors
Toby Coppel, SVP Corporate Development, Yahoo
Dick Costolo, Co-Founder and CEO, Feedburner
Jonathan Coulton, Founder, JonathanCoulton.com
James Currier, CEO, Ooga Labs
Sky Dayton, CEO, Helio
Ethan Diamond, Co-Founder, Oddpost (Yahoo)
Craig Donato, Founder and CEO, Oodle
Rael Dornfest, Founder and CEO, Stikit
Lisa Ellis, EVP, Sony BMG
Tony Fadell, SVP, iPod Division, Apple
Caterina Fake, Co-Founder, Flickr (Yahoo)
Iggy Fanlo, CEO, AdBright
Josh Felser, Co-Founder and CEO, Grouper (Sony)
Shana Fisher, SVP of Strategy and M&A, Interactive Corp.
Erik Flannigan, VP of Programming, AOL
Jason Flom, Chairman and CEO, Virgin Records
Bill Flora, Designer, Zune, Microsoft
Tod Francis, General Partner, Shasta Ventures
Lisa Gansky, Co-Founder, Ofoto, GNN
Brad Garlinghouse, SVP, Yahoo
Dave Geary, SVP Business Development, BetZip
Bernard Gershon, SVP and General Manager, ABC News Digital Media
John Girard, CEO, Clickability
Steve Glenn, Founder and CEO, LivingHomes
Tom Glocer, CEO, Reuters
Shawn Gold, SVP, Marketing and Content, MySpace (Fox)
Seth Goldstein, Founder, AttentionSoft
Paul Graham, Founder, Y Combinator
Martin Green, SVP, CNET
Jordan Greenhall, CEO, Divx
Joe Greenstein, CEO, Flixster
Jim Greer, Founder and CEO, Kongregate
Andre Haddad, SVP Product, eBay
Brad Handler, Co-Founder, Exclusive Resorts
Heather Harde, CEO, TechCrunch
Matt Haughey, Founder, MetaFilter
Rob Hayes, General Partner, First Round Capital
Marc Hedlund, Co-Founder, Wesabe
Scott Heiferman, CEO, Meetup
Jay Higginbotham, VP New Initiatives, Turner Broadcasting Systems
Brent Hoberman, Chairman and Chief Strategic Officer, Lastminute.com
Reid Hoffman, Founder, LinkedIn
Auren Hoffman, Founder and CEO, Rapleaf
James Hong, Founder, HotOrNot
Bradley Horowitz, VP Product Strategy, Yahoo
Arriana Huffington, CEO, Huffington Post
Chad Hurley, Co-Founder and CEO, YouTube (Google)
Joi Ito, Board Member, Mozilla, Creative Commons
Michael Jackson, President of Programming, Interactive Corp.
Mark Jacobsen, Managing General Partner, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures
Daniel James, CEO, Three Rings
James Joaquin, Venture Partner, Bridgescale
Rob Kalin, Founder and CEO, Etsy
Mitch Kapor, Chairman, Open Source Applications Foundation
Philip Kaplan, Founder, AdBright
Alex Kazim, SVP, Skype (eBay)
Patrick Keane, EVP and Chief Marketing Officer, CBS Interactive
Kourosh Kharimkany, GM, Wired.com
Ben Kilgore, Xbox Live, Microsoft
Zach Klein, VP Development, CollegeHumor (IAC)
George Kliavkoff, Chief Digital Officer, NBC Universal
Josh Kopelman, Managing Director, First Round Capital
Joe Kraus, Co-Founder and CEO, JotSpot (Google)
Tariq Krim, Founder and CEO, Netvibes
Justin LaFrance, Co-Founder, StumbleUpon
Roger Lang, CEO, TransAria
Jim Lanzone, CEO, Ask.com
Doug Leeds, VP Products, Ask.com
Max Levchin, Founder and CEO, Slide
Jordan Levin, Partner, Generate
Ross Levinsohn, Former President, Fox Interactive Media
Peter Levinsohn, President, Fox Interactive Media
Ellen Levy, Director, MediaX (Stanford)
Jeremy Liew, General Partner, Lightspeed Venture Partners
John Lilly, COO, Mozilla
Jakob Lodwick, CTO, CollegeHumor (IAC)
Rob Lord, Founder and CEO, Songbird
Nancy Lublin, CEO, Do Something
Zander Lurie, SVP, Strategy and Development, CNET
Eric Lunt, Co-Founder and CTO, FeedBurner
Joel Makower, CEO, Green World Media
Om Malik, Founder and CEO, GigaOm
Mike Marquez, VP Corporate Development, CBS Interactive
Chris Maxcy, VP Business Development, YouTube (Google)
Marissa Mayer, VP Search Products and User Experience, Google
Ian McCarthy, VP Product Marketing, Orb Networks
Judy McGrath, Chairman and CEO, MTV Networks
Fred McIntyre, VP of Video Products, AOL
Mary Meeker, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley
Vivek Mehra, General Partner, August Capital
Rick Mueller, President, LiveNation
Chris Michel, CEO, Affinity Labs
Jon Miller, Former CEO, AOL
Perkins Miller, SVP, NBC Universal
Louis Monier, Distinguished Engineer, Google
Bob Morgan, VP and GM, Shozu
Sean Moriarty, President and CEO, Ticketmaster
Steve Mosko, President, Sony Pictures Television
Walt Mossberg, Founder, D: All Things Digital
Rajeev Motwani, Professor, Stanford Universirty, Advisor, Google
Matt Mullenweg, Founder, Wordpress
Ashwin Navin, President and COO, BitTorrent
Steve Newhouse, Chairman, CondeNet
Craig Newmark, Founder, Craig’s List
Kent Nichols, Creator, Ask A Ninja
Martin Nisenholtz, SVP Digital Media, New York Times
Elliot Noss, CEO, Tuckows
Mathieu Nouzareth, CEO, Boonty
Pierre Omidyar, Founder, eBay
Tim O’Reilly, CEO, O’Reilly Publishing
Thomas Oscherwitz, Chief Privacy Officer, ID Analytics
Larry Page, Co-Founder & President, Products, Google
DJ Patil, Corporate Architect, eBay
Sunil Paul, Angel Investor
Gil Penchina, CEO, Wikia
Chris Petrovic, VP Busines Development, Playboy
Peter Pham, VP Business Development, Photobucket
Jeremy Philips, SVP, News Corp.
Mark Pincus, Founder, Tribe
Anil Podduturi, Supervising Producer, MTV Digital Media
Ariel Poler, Founder and CEO, TextMarks
Will Poole, SVP, Microsoft
Geoff Prentice, VP Strategic Partners and Corporate Development, Skype
Arvind Rajan, President and CEO, Grassroots Enterprises
Ted Rheingold, Co-Founder and CEO, Dogster
David Richter, VP and General Counsel, Divx Networks
Danny Rimer, General Partner, Index Ventures
Narendra Rocherolle, CEO, 30 Boxes
Antonio Rodriguez, CEO, Tabblo
Scott Roesch, VP and General Manager, Atom Films
Kevin Rose, Founder and Chief Architect, Digg
Philip Rosedale, Founder and CEO, Linden Labs (Second Life)
Steve Rosenbaum, CEO, Magnify Media
Richard Rosenblat, CEO, Demand Media
Bruce Rosenblum, President, Warner Brothers Television Group
Dan Rosensweig, Former COO, Yahoo
Sean Ryan, CEO, Meez
Kevin Ryan, Co-Founder and CEO, ShopWiki
Adam Rymer, SVP, Digital Platforms, Universal Pictures
Chris Sacca, Head, Special Initiatives, Google
Matt Sanchez, CEO, VideoEgg
Scott Sangster, Director, Strategy and Development, Disney Interactive Group
Chris Satchell, GM, Game Development, Xbox, Microsoft
Joshua Schachter, Founder, Delicious
Toni Schneider, CEO, Wordpress
Munjal Shah, Founder and CEO, Riya
Tina Sharkey, CEO, BabyCenter
Kevin Shields, GM, Media Center, Microsoft
Willy Shih, Associate Professor, Harvard Business School
Ram Shriram, Board Member, Google
H.B. Siegel, Technical Director, IMDb (Amazon)
Dave Sifry, Founder and CEO, Technorati
Josh Silverman, CEO, Shopping.com
Quincy Smith, President, CBS Interactive
Geoff Smith, Co-Founder, StumbleUpon
Megan Smith, Director, New Business Development and Strategy, Google
Rick Smolan, CEO, Against All Odds Productions
Gregg Spiridellis, Co-Founder and CEO, JibJab
Danah Stalder, SVP, Marketing and Business Operations, PayPal
Mark Stevens, Partner, Fenwick & West
Seth Sternberg, Co-Founder and CEO, Meebo
Lisa Stone, Co-Founder, BlogHer
Jeremy Stoppleman, Founder and CEO, Yelp
Kara Swisher, Founder, D: All Things Digital
Dan Surratt, EVP Digital Media, Lifetime Networks
Craig Syverson, Founder and CEO, Grunt Media
David Sze, General Partner, Greylock Capital
Peter Thiel, President, Clarium Capital
Scott Teissler, CIO and CTO, Turner Broadcasting Systems
Selina Tobaccawala, SVP, Product and Technology, Ticketmaster Europe
Gina Trapani, Guru, LifeHacker
Bill Trenchard, Chairman, LiveOps
Ben Trott, Co-Founder and CTO, Six Apart
Mena Trott, Co-Founder and President, Six Apart
Owen Van Natta, COO, Facebook
Yossi Vardi, Chairman, International Technologies
Michael Van Swaaij, Chief Strategy Officer, eBay
Martin Varsavsky, Founder and CEO, Fon
Jeff Veen, Founder, MeasureMap (Google)
Steve Venuto, Partner, Orrick
Jimmy Wales, Founder, Wikipedia
Charlie Walk, President, Epic Records
Hunter Walk, Manager, Google Video, Google
Ted Wang, Partner, Fenwick & West
Paul Wehrley, VP of Strategic Operations, Ask.com
Mark Weinberg, Director of Engineering, Zune, Microsoft
Jeff Weiner, SVP of Search, Yahoo
Steve Weinstein, President and CEO, MovieLabs
Alex Welch, Founder and CEO, Photobucket
Kara Welker, Partner, Generate
Denmark West, EVP, Chief of Operations, MTV Networks
Tim Westergren, Founder and Chief Strategy Officer, Pandora
Eric Wheeler, CEO, Neo@Ogilvy
Evan Williams, Founder, Obvious Corp. (Twitter)
Luke Wood, Head of A & R, Universal Music
Andrea Wong, EVP, Alternative Programming, ABC
Will Wright, Creator, The Sims, Spore
Sam Yagan, Co-Founder and CEO, OKCupid
Jerry Yang, Co-Founder and Chief Yahoo!, Yahoo
Jim Young, Co-Founder, HotOrNot
Niklas Zennstrom, Founder, Skype (eBay), Joost
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO, Facebook
Mitch Zuklie, Partner, Orrick

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