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Tag: ConnectU

  • Divya Narendra (Of Co-Founding ConnectU With The Winklevii Fame) Joins Twitter

    Divya Narendra, the guy that co-founded ConnectU with Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, has joined Twitter. The Winklevii have been fun to keep up with Twitter, particularly when they reference Facebook. Hopefully Narendra’s presence will add to that equation.

    His only tweet so far:

    Hello World, I mean Twitter. 18 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Not all that compelling, but hopefully they’ll get better.

    All, please give @DivyaNarendra a warm welcome to twitter! #FF 18 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Narendra is currently CEO and co-founder of SumZero, a financial utility for buy-side investors.

    In the film, he was portrayed by Max Minhella.

    The story of these three guys, ConnectU and the founding of Facebook, of course, was turned into a well-known story in the mainstream with the critically acclaimed David Fincher film The Social Network, based on Ben Mezrich’s book The Accidental Billionaires.

  • ConnectU Founders Claim Facebook Fight Not Over

    ConnectU Founders Claim Facebook Fight Not Over

    After a false start or two, it appeared that an argument about the founding of Facebook was resolved in 2008, with an out-of-court settlement ending the quarrel between Facebook and ConnectU founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.  The Winklevoss twins have now claimed that’s not the case, though, implying that more lawsuits might be on the way.

    A couple of not-relevant-but-still-interesting-pieces-of-information: the brothers will soon row for Oxford University in the classic Boat Race against Cambridge, and the BBC’s Rory Cellan-Jones caught up with them in Christ Church Hall.

    Then here’s the pertinent quote: with regards to Facebook, Cameron told Cellan-Jones, "I think it is safe to say the chapter is not closed on the matter."

    Tyler also added, "It’s our duty to stand for principles.  We’re willing to wait around and make sure that’s what right has been made right."

    So Mark Zuckerberg and his team of lawyers may want to prepare for Round Whatever of this long-running dispute.  The matter of who founded Facebook is something that will have to be decided before the company goes public, since shareholders won’t want new claimants popping up all the time, and even if that’s not an immediate concern, the implication that Zuckerberg stole code doesn’t amount to good publicity.