I'm hiring engineer #1 for Lore.com. Based in San Francisco but remote is okay!
Looking for someone experienced creating beautiful web apps with React. You need to be comfortable moving fast and pivoting as we look for product market fit.
Content buyers spent $79B in 2019. The market is booming because of streaming. We're building a platform for artists, writers and fans to collaborate on creating movie & television concepts to sell to buyers.
The idea was inspired by me spending a year partnered with Barrie Osborne(producer of Lord of the Rings, Matrix, Mulan) trying to create a new kind of movie studio where fans would provide feedback on storyboards and prove interest in ideas before we made them.
Launching private beta in 3 weeks.
Email me at nathan@lore.com with resume / bio links.
Even if Mark Zuckerberg ends up being "wrong" by your definition, why does that mean he lied? It's odd to assume negative intent or that you know what is going on inside other people's heads.
More odd to assume that Zuckerberg hasn’t had any feedback about how Facebook is used, or any sway over how it has been built. He’s hardly been a passive observer.
So, there are two ways of looking at Zuckerberg's idealistic positioning of Facebook as a force for good, which is how he pitched to me when I was recruited as a PM there in 2007 (and offered a job which I ultimately declined due to a counter offer, much to the detriment of my current net worth, but that is irrelevant to the current discussion):
1. Either this reflected a sincere belief by Zuck to build a different kind of product/corporate entity governed more by ethics than by money and power, or
2. This utopian positioning was a calculated recruiting strategy to attract the best and brightest recent grads from Stanford and other elite universities, who were extremely attracted by the idea of getting paid six figures to work on a fascinating product without having to sell our soul, like our friends in finance etc.
Or it could be some combination of those two.
My point is that if the underlying motivation were truly to do good, Facebook would have done something differently over the last 5+ years as the capacity for its product to cause harm became abundantly evident.
Instead, at every crisis/opportunity to fix the underlying issues, Facebook chose to brush problems under the rug in the pursuit of growth.
From my perspective, as someone who drank the Facebook kool-aid more than just about anyone in the early days, this represents a painful betrayal. I feel like one of the "dumb fucks" who trusted Zuckerberg's pitch to me back in the day.
We've already had a look inside his head, because he joked with his friends about how naive the people giving their information to him were for trusting, and how they were dumb fucks that he looked forward to fucking in the ear.
Sure, he might have changed since, but there's nothing wrong with rational speculation. Selfishness and greed are real phenomena in human relations so it would be as foolish to ignore such possibilities as to believe them uncritically.
> We've already had a look inside his head, because he joked with his friends about how naive the people giving their information to him were for trusting, and how they were dumb fucks that he looked forward to fucking in the ear.
You're reading a lot into a (admittedly stupid) quip/jab/whatever-you-want-to-call it by a 19 year old.
I don't even disagree with your fundamental assertion here, just that this is incredibly weak evidence.
No I'm not. I'm using it as an easy-to-recognize reference to a body of knowledge about the early stages of Facebook, which I feel no need to retype in full every time someone declares themselves innocent of any contextual knowledge. The name for this literary device is synecdoche, and I think you know perfectly well what the ancillary context is.
Looking for someone experienced creating beautiful web apps with React. You need to be comfortable moving fast and pivoting as we look for product market fit.
Content buyers spent $79B in 2019. The market is booming because of streaming. We're building a platform for artists, writers and fans to collaborate on creating movie & television concepts to sell to buyers.
The idea was inspired by me spending a year partnered with Barrie Osborne(producer of Lord of the Rings, Matrix, Mulan) trying to create a new kind of movie studio where fans would provide feedback on storyboards and prove interest in ideas before we made them.
Launching private beta in 3 weeks.
Email me at nathan@lore.com with resume / bio links.