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The Accidental Billionaires

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The Accidental Billionaires:
The Founding of Facebook, A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betrayal
Cover of the First Edition
AuthorBen Mezrich
LanguageEnglish
SubjectFacebook
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherDoubleday
Publication date
July 14, 2009 (2009-07-14)
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint
Pages260
ISBN978-0-385-52937-2
OCLC422928345

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook, A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betrayal is a 2009 book by Ben Mezrich about the founding of Facebook.[1] Co-founder Eduardo Saverin served as Mezrich's main consultant.[1] Mark Zuckerberg declined to speak with Ben Mezrich while the book was being researched and after Zuckerberg and Saverin settled their lawsuit, Saverin broke off contact with the author.

Sources

Ben Mezrich maintains that the book is not a work of fiction despite his narrative style of writing. Some of his main sources are his conversations with Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin and the court documents made available to him because of "all these college kids suing each other", in his own words.[2][3]

Content

The story begins a few weeks preceding the launch of "thefacebook.com" in Harvard. Eduardo, cast as the protagonist, befriends Mark, and both struggle for social acceptance—Eduardo by joining a Final club, and Mark by creating a website where girls can be ranked according to their looks. Mark's stunt, though successful, puts him at odds with the Harvard Administrative Board, and has angered numerous campus women's groups, as well as individual female students. He does get noticed by Harvard seniors Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and Divya Narendra who are trying to launch a dating site. The trio approach Mark and convince him to join in. Mark however sees that their site doesn't have what he thinks is the right approach and starts to develop thefacebook.com with some help from Eduardo and Mark's roommates.

Once thefacebook.com is launched it becomes an instant hit on campus and infuriates the Winklevoss twins and Divya, who were kept out of the loop. The story then narrates the changing relationship with Mark and Eduardo, who have different methods of operating.

While the first half of the book centers on the Harvard University campus and focuses on college life, the second half centers around business in Silicon Valley. Sean Parker of Napster fame becomes a mentor to Zuckerberg and guides him through Silicon Valley venture capitalists and other players in the industry. Eduardo, while completing his graduation, continues to feel sidelined by Parker, who he feels is not the best influence on Zuckerberg.

The end of the book cannot provide a conclusion since, according to the author's admission, matters are ongoing in the court of law. However, it does close a chapter in the Facebook story.

Film adaptation

Columbia Pictures released a film adaptation of the book in 2010 titled The Social Network.[4] The film was directed by David Fincher with the screenplay written by Aaron Sorkin, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.[5]

References

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