Mark Zuckerberg, 23, founded Facebook while studying psychology
at Harvard University. A keen computer programmer, Mr Zuckerberg had already
developed a number of social-networking websites for fellow students, including
Coursematch, which allowed users to view people taking their degree, and
Facemash, where you could rate people's attractiveness.
In February 2004 Mr
Zuckerberg launched "The facebook", as it was originally known; the
name taken from the sheets of paper distributed to freshmen, profiling students
and staff. Within 24 hours, 1,200 Harvard students had signed up, and after one
month, over half of the undergraduate population had a profile.
The network was promptly
extended to other Boston universities, the Ivy League and eventually all US
universities. It became Facebook.com in August 2005 after the address was
purchased for $200,000. US high schools could sign up from September 2005, then
it began to spread worldwide, reaching UK universities the following month.
As of September 2006,
the network was extended beyond educational institutions to anyone with a
registered email address. The site remains free to join, and makes a profit
through advertising revenue. Yahoo and Google are among companies which have
expressed interest in a buy-out, with rumoured figures of around $2bn (£975m)
being discussed. Mr Zuckerberg has so far refused to sell.
The site's features have
continued to develop during 2007. Users can now give gifts to friends, post
free classified advertisements and even develop their own applications -
graffiti and Scrabble are particularly popular.
This month the company
announced that the number of registered users had reached 30 million, making it
the largest social-networking site with an education focus.
Earlier in the year
there were rumours that Prince William had registered, but it was later
revealed to be a mere impostor. The MP David Miliband, the radio DJ Jo Whiley,
the actor Orlando Bloom, the artist Tracey Emin and the founder of Wikipedia,
Jimmy Wales, are among confirmed high-profile members.
This month officials
banned a flash-mob-style water fight in Hyde Park, organised through Facebook,
due to public safety fears. And there was further controversy at Oxford as
students became aware that university authorities were checking their Facebook
profiles.
The legal case against
Facebook dates back to September 2004, when Divya Narendra, and the brothers
Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, who founded the social-networking site ConnectU,
accused Mr Zuckerberg of copying their ideas and coding. Mr Zuckerberg had
worked as a computer programmer for them when they were all at Harvard before
Facebook was created.
The case was dismissed
due to a technicality in March 2007 but without a ruling.
Facebook, Inc.
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Foundation date
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Cambridge, Massachusetts,U.S. (February 4, 2004)
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Headquarters
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Menlo Park, California, U.S.
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Area served
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United
States (2004–05)
Worldwide (2005–present) |
Key people
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Mark Zuckerberg
(Chairman and CEO) Sheryl Sandberg (COO) |
Industry
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US$ 538 million (2012)[2]
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US$ 53 million (2012)[2]
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US$ 15.10 billion (2012)[2]
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US$ 11.75 billion (2012)[2]
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Employees
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5,794 (September 2013)[3]
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Subsidiaries
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Website
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Written in
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Alexa rank
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2 (December 2013)[5]
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Type of site
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Registration
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Required
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1.19 billion (active
September 2013)[6]
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Multilingual (70)
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Launched
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February 4, 2004
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Current status
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Active
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