The Social Network (2010)

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The Social Network is a 2010 American biographical drama film directed by David Fincher and written by Aaron Sorkin, based on the 2009 book The Accidental Billionaires by Ben Mezrich. It portrays the founding of social networking website Facebook. It stars Jesse Eisenberg as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, with Andrew Garfield as Eduardo Saverin, Justin Timberlake as Sean Parker, Armie Hammer as Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, and Max Minghella as Divya Narendra. Neither Zuckerberg nor any other Facebook staff were involved with the project, although Saverin was a consultant for Mezrich's book
Transcript
00:00:00 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:00:03 Did you know there are more people with genius IQs
00:00:18 living in China than there are people of any kind
00:00:20 living in the United States?
00:00:21 That can't possibly be true.
00:00:22 It is.
00:00:22 What would account for that?
00:00:23 Well, first, an awful lot of people live in China.
00:00:25 But here's my question.
00:00:27 How do you distinguish yourself in a population of people
00:00:29 who've all got 1,600 on their SATs?
00:00:31 I didn't know they take SATs in China.
00:00:32 They don't.
00:00:33 I wasn't talking about China anymore.
00:00:34 I was talking about me.
00:00:35 You got a 1,600?
00:00:36 Yes.
00:00:37 I could sing in an a cappella group, but I can't sing.
00:00:39 Does that mean you actually got nothing wrong?
00:00:40 I could row crew or invest a $25 PC.
00:00:42 Or you could get into a final club.
00:00:44 Or I get into a final club.
00:00:45 You know, from a woman's perspective,
00:00:46 sometimes not singing in an a cappella group is a good thing.
00:00:49 This is serious.
00:00:49 On the other hand, I do like guys who row crew.
00:00:51 Well, I can't do that.
00:00:53 I was kidding.
00:00:54 Yes, I got nothing wrong on the test.
00:00:56 Have you ever tried?
00:00:57 I'm trying right now.
00:00:58 To row crew?
00:00:59 To get into a final club.
00:01:00 To row crew, no.
00:01:00 Are you, like, whatever, delusional?
00:01:02 Maybe it's just sometimes you say two things at once.
00:01:04 I'm not sure which one I'm supposed to be aiming at.
00:01:06 But you've seen guys who row crew, right?
00:01:08 No.
00:01:09 OK, well, they're bigger than me.
00:01:10 They're world-class athletes.
00:01:11 And a second ago, you said you liked guys who row crew.
00:01:13 So I assumed you had met one.
00:01:14 I guess I just meant I like the idea of it, you know,
00:01:16 the way a girl likes cowboys.
00:01:19 OK.
00:01:20 Should we get something to eat?
00:01:21 Would you like to talk about something else?
00:01:23 No.
00:01:24 It's just since the beginning of the conversation
00:01:25 about finals club, I think I may have missed a birthday.
00:01:29 There are really more people in China with genius IQs
00:01:31 than the entire population.
00:01:32 The Phoenix is the most diverse.
00:01:33 The Fly Club.
00:01:34 Roosevelt punched the pork.
00:01:36 Which one?
00:01:36 The porcelain, the pork.
00:01:37 It's the best of the best.
00:01:38 Which Roosevelt?
00:01:39 Theodore.
00:01:41 Is it true that they send a bus around to pick up girls
00:01:43 who want to party with the next Fed chairman?
00:01:45 So you can see why it's so important to get in.
00:01:47 OK, well, which is the easiest to get into?
00:01:49 Why would you ask me that?
00:01:54 I was just asking.
00:01:55 None of them.
00:01:56 That's the point.
00:01:57 My friend Eduardo made $300,000 betting oil futures one summer,
00:02:00 and Eduardo will come close to getting it.
00:02:02 The ability to make money doesn't
00:02:03 impress anybody around here.
00:02:04 Must be nice.
00:02:05 He made $300,000 in the summer?
00:02:07 He likes meteorology.
00:02:08 He said it was oil futures.
00:02:10 You can read the weather.
00:02:10 You can predict the price of heating oil.
00:02:12 I think you asked me that because you
00:02:13 think the final club that's easiest to get into
00:02:15 is the one where I'll have the best chance.
00:02:16 I-- what?
00:02:18 You asked me which one was the easiest to get into
00:02:20 because you think that that's the one
00:02:21 where I'll have the best chance.
00:02:23 The one that's the easiest to get into
00:02:25 would be the one where anybody has the best chance.
00:02:27 You didn't ask me which one was the best one.
00:02:28 You asked me which one was the easiest one.
00:02:30 I was honestly just asking, OK?
00:02:32 I was just asking to ask.
00:02:33 Mark, I'm not speaking in code.
00:02:35 Erica.
00:02:36 You're obsessed with finals clubs.
00:02:38 You have finals clubs OCD, and you need to see someone about it.
00:02:41 We'll prescribe you some sort of medication.
00:02:43 You don't care if the side effects
00:02:44 may include blindness.
00:02:45 Final clubs, not finals clubs.
00:02:49 And there's a difference between being obsessed
00:02:51 and being motivated.
00:02:52 Yes, there is.
00:02:54 Well, you do.
00:02:55 That was cryptic.
00:02:55 So you do speak in code.
00:02:57 I didn't mean to be cryptic.
00:02:58 I'm just saying I need to do something substantial in order
00:03:00 to get the attention of the clubs.
00:03:01 Why?
00:03:02 Because they're exclusive and fun,
00:03:04 and they lead to a better life.
00:03:06 Teddy Roosevelt didn't get elected president
00:03:07 because he was a member of the Phoenix Club.
00:03:09 He was a member of the Porcellian, and yes, he did.
00:03:12 Well, why don't you just concentrate on being
00:03:14 the best you you can be?
00:03:16 Did you really just say that?
00:03:17 I was kidding.
00:03:18 Although, just because someone's trite
00:03:20 doesn't make it any less--
00:03:20 I want to try to be straightforward with you
00:03:21 and tell you that I think you might want
00:03:22 to be a little more supportive.
00:03:24 If I get in, I will be taking you
00:03:25 to the events and the gatherings,
00:03:27 and you'll be meeting a lot of people
00:03:28 you wouldn't normally get to meet.
00:03:32 You would do that for me?
00:03:34 We're dating.
00:03:36 OK.
00:03:38 Well, I want to try and be straightforward with you
00:03:40 and let you know that we're not anymore.
00:03:42 What do you mean?
00:03:43 We're not dating anymore.
00:03:44 I'm sorry.
00:03:45 Is this a joke?
00:03:45 No, it's not.
00:03:47 You're breaking up with me?
00:03:48 You are going to introduce me to people I wouldn't normally
00:03:50 have the chance to meet.
00:03:51 What the-- what is that supposed to mean?
00:03:53 Wait, settle down.
00:03:53 What is it supposed to mean?
00:03:54 Erica, the reason we're able to sit here and drink right now
00:03:56 is because you used to sleep with the door guy.
00:03:59 The door guy?
00:04:00 His name is Bobby.
00:04:01 I have not slept with the door guy.
00:04:03 The door guy is a friend of mine,
00:04:04 and he's a perfectly good class of people.
00:04:07 And what part of Long Island are you from?
00:04:09 Wimbledon? - Wait.
00:04:10 I'm going back to my door guy.
00:04:11 Wait, wait. Is this real?
00:04:13 Yes. - OK.
00:04:13 Then wait. I apologize, OK?
00:04:15 I have to go study.
00:04:16 - Erica? - Yes?
00:04:17 I'm sorry. I mean it.
00:04:18 I appreciate that, but I have to go study.
00:04:19 Come on, you don't have to study.
00:04:20 You don't have to study. Let's just talk.
00:04:22 I can't. - Why?
00:04:23 Because it is exhausting.
00:04:24 Dating you is like dating a stairmaster.
00:04:26 All I meant is that you're not likely to--
00:04:28 currently.
00:04:28 I wasn't making a comment on your parents.
00:04:29 I was just saying that you go to BU.
00:04:30 I was stating a fact.
00:04:31 Let's all-- and if it seemed rude, then of course I apologize.
00:04:33 I have to go study.
00:04:34 You don't have to study.
00:04:34 Why do you keep saying I don't have to study?
00:04:36 Because you go to BU.
00:04:36 [LAUGHTER]
00:04:39 Want to get some food?
00:04:42 I'm sorry.
00:04:43 You are not sufficiently impressed with my education.
00:04:45 I'm sorry. I don't have a robot.
00:04:46 So are you, then.
00:04:47 I think we should just be friends.
00:04:48 I don't want friends.
00:04:50 I was just being polite.
00:04:51 I have no intention of being friends with you.
00:04:52 I'm under some pressure right now from my OS class.
00:04:54 And if we could just order some food, I think we should--
00:04:57 You are probably going to be a very successful computer
00:05:00 person.
00:05:02 But you're going to go through life thinking that girls don't
00:05:04 like you because you're a nerd.
00:05:07 And I want you to know from the bottom of my heart
00:05:09 that that won't be true.
00:05:12 It'll be because you're an asshole.
00:05:15 [MOTORCYCLE REVS]
00:05:17 [CHATTER]
00:05:20 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:24 [MOTORCYCLE REVS]
00:05:28 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:31 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:35 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:38 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:42 [MUSIC PLAYING]
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00:05:49 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:05:55 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:02 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:14 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:17 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:21 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:24 [MOTORCYCLE REVS]
00:06:49 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:06:53 [CHATTER]
00:07:05 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:07:08 [CHATTER]
00:07:12 [CHATTER]
00:07:16 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:07:22 [CHATTER]
00:07:28 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:07:32 [CHATTER]
00:07:35 [MOTORCYCLE REVS]
00:07:55 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:07:58 Erica Albright's a bitch.
00:08:18 Do you think that's because her family changed
00:08:20 their name from Albrecht?
00:08:21 Or do you think it's because all BU girls are bitches?
00:08:24 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:08:27 For the record, she may look like a 34C,
00:08:30 but she's getting all kinds of help from our friends
00:08:32 at Victoria's Secret.
00:08:33 She's a 34B, as in barely anything there.
00:08:36 False advertising.
00:08:37 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:08:40 The truth is, she has a nice face.
00:08:44 I need to do something to take my mind off her.
00:08:46 Easy enough, except I need an idea.
00:08:47 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:08:52 [CHATTER]
00:08:54 I'm a little intoxicated.
00:08:56 I'm not going to lie.
00:08:57 So what if it's not even 10 PM and it's a Tuesday night?
00:09:00 The Kirkland Facebook is open on my desktop,
00:09:02 and some of these people have pretty horrendous Facebook pics.
00:09:05 Billy Olsen's sitting here and had
00:09:07 the idea of putting some of the pictures
00:09:08 next to pictures of farm animals and have
00:09:10 people vote on who's hotter.
00:09:11 Good call, Mr. Olsen.
00:09:13 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:09:20 Yeah, it's on.
00:09:21 I'm not going to do the farm animals,
00:09:23 but I like the idea of comparing two people together.
00:09:24 It gives the whole thing a very Turing feel,
00:09:26 since people's ratings of the pictures
00:09:27 will be more implicit than, say, choosing
00:09:29 a number to represent each person's hotness,
00:09:31 like they do on hotternot.com.
00:09:33 The first thing we're going to need is a lot of pictures.
00:09:35 Unfortunately, Harvard doesn't keep
00:09:36 a public centralized Facebook, so I'm
00:09:37 going to have to get all the images from the individual
00:09:40 houses that people are in.
00:09:42 Let the hacking begin.
00:09:43 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:09:46 [WATER SPLASHING]
00:09:50 First up is Kirkland.
00:10:00 They keep everything open and allow indexes
00:10:02 in their Apache configuration, so a little Wget magic
00:10:05 is all that's necessary to download the entire Kirkland
00:10:07 Facebook.
00:10:08 It's stuff.
00:10:09 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:10:12 [WATER SPLASHING]
00:10:15 Next is Elliot.
00:10:27 They're also open, but with no indexes on Apache.
00:10:30 I can run an empty search, and it
00:10:31 returns all the images in the database in a single page.
00:10:33 And I can save the page, and Mozilla
00:10:35 will save all the images for me.
00:10:36 [INAUDIBLE]
00:10:37 Excellent.
00:10:38 Moving right along.
00:10:39 Excuse me.
00:10:40 Everybody, you are at one of the oldest,
00:10:43 one of the most exclusive clubs, not just at Harvard,
00:10:46 but in the world.
00:10:47 And I want to welcome you all to Phoenix Club's first party
00:10:50 of the fall semester.
00:10:51 [CHEERING]
00:10:52 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:10:56 Lowell has some security.
00:11:01 They require a username password combo,
00:11:02 and I'm going to go ahead and say
00:11:03 they don't have access to the main FAS user database,
00:11:05 so they have no way of detecting an intrusion.
00:11:08 Adams has no security, but limits the number of results
00:11:10 to 20 a page.
00:11:11 All I need to do is break out the same script I
00:11:13 used on Lowell, and we're set.
00:11:16 Quincy has no online Facebook.
00:11:18 What a sham.
00:11:19 Nothing I can do about that.
00:11:21 Dunster is intense.
00:11:22 Not only is there no public directory,
00:11:24 but there's no directory at all.
00:11:25 You have to do searches.
00:11:26 And if your search returns more than 20 matches,
00:11:28 nothing gets returned.
00:11:29 And once you do get results, they
00:11:30 don't link directly to the images.
00:11:31 They link to a PHP that redirects or something.
00:11:33 Weird.
00:11:34 This may be difficult. I'll come back later.
00:11:35 Hey, shark me some.
00:11:36 What?
00:11:38 Great one.
00:11:39 Beautiful fish.
00:11:40 Thanks.
00:11:40 Leopard is a little better.
00:11:41 They still make you search, but you can do an empty search
00:11:43 and get links to pages with every student's picture.
00:11:45 It's slightly obnoxious that they only
00:11:46 let you view one picture at a time,
00:11:48 and there's no way I'm going to go to 500 pages
00:11:49 to download pics one at a time.
00:11:51 So it's definitely necessary to break out Emacs
00:11:53 and modify that Perl script.
00:11:54 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:11:57 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:12:01 Done.
00:12:13 Hey, what's going on?
00:12:15 Perfect timing.
00:12:16 Eduardo's here, and he's going to have the key ingredient.
00:12:19 Hey, Mark.
00:12:19 Eduardo.
00:12:20 You and Erica split up.
00:12:23 How did you know that?
00:12:24 It's on your blog.
00:12:26 Yeah.
00:12:26 Are you all right?
00:12:28 I need you.
00:12:29 I'm here for you.
00:12:30 No, I need the algorithm you used to rank chess players.
00:12:32 Are you OK?
00:12:33 We're ranking girls.
00:12:34 You mean other students?
00:12:38 Yeah.
00:12:39 You think this is such a good idea?
00:12:41 I need the algorithm.
00:12:42 All right.
00:12:42 I need the algorithm.
00:12:45 Give each girl a base rating of 1,400.
00:12:48 At any given time, girl A has a rating RA,
00:12:50 and girl B has a rating RB.
00:12:52 When any two girls are matched up,
00:12:54 there's an expectation of which will win based
00:12:55 on their current rating, right?
00:12:57 Yeah.
00:12:57 And those expectations are expressed this way.
00:13:00 Let's write it.
00:13:01 The left.
00:13:19 The right.
00:13:20 Left.
00:13:21 The right.
00:13:22 Orange.
00:13:22 Who should we send it to first?
00:13:23 Dwyer.
00:13:24 Neil.
00:13:25 Who are you going to send it to?
00:13:26 Just a couple of people.
00:13:28 Question is, who are they going to send it to?
00:13:30 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:34 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:35 [MUSIC PLAYING]
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00:13:47 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:49 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:50 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:52 [MUSIC PLAYING]
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00:13:56 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:58 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:13:59 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:01 Hey, guys.
00:14:01 Check this out.
00:14:02 [LAUGHTER]
00:14:04 [INTERPOSING VOICES]
00:14:05 So we're going to the left.
00:14:06 If you left.
00:14:06 These girls.
00:14:08 Right or left?
00:14:09 Left, isn't it?
00:14:10 Left.
00:14:10 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:14:12 Right or left?
00:14:14 That's my roommate.
00:14:16 Oh, my god.
00:14:17 You're on the left.
00:14:19 This is pathetic.
00:14:21 Right.
00:14:22 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:24 Left or right?
00:14:26 Oh, shit.
00:14:28 All right.
00:14:31 He blocked about you.
00:14:33 You don't want to read it.
00:14:34 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:37 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:38 Left.
00:14:40 Ooh, that's a--
00:14:41 Erica.
00:14:43 Is this yours?
00:14:45 I stole it from a tranny.
00:14:46 Get the hell out of here.
00:14:48 [LAUGHTER]
00:14:49 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:50 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:53 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:55 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:57 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:14:59 Awful lot of traffic.
00:15:01 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:02 Maybe we shouldn't shut it down before we get into trouble.
00:15:05 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:08 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:10 [PHONE RINGING]
00:15:13 Hello?
00:15:18 Wait, wait, wait, wait.
00:15:21 4 in the morning?
00:15:22 Well, there's a very unusual amount of traffic
00:15:24 to the switch at Kirkland.
00:15:26 You're saying it's unusual at 4 in the morning?
00:15:28 No, this would be unusual for halftime at the Super Bowl.
00:15:31 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:32 All right.
00:15:33 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:36 I better go in.
00:15:38 What's going on?
00:15:40 Harvard's network is about to crash.
00:15:42 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:44 [BUZZER]
00:15:45 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:48 You-- you don't think?
00:15:52 I do.
00:15:54 Go see if it's everybody.
00:15:55 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:15:58 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:16:00 [PHONE RINGING]
00:16:02 Can't connect.
00:16:03 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:16:04 The network's down.
00:16:06 Unless it's a coincidence, I think this is us.
00:16:09 It's not a coincidence.
00:16:11 Holy shit.
00:16:12 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:16:14 [PHONE RINGING]
00:16:16 So you were called in front of the ad board.
00:16:18 That's not what happened.
00:16:19 You weren't called in front of the administrative board.
00:16:21 No, back.
00:16:22 I mean, back at the bar with Erica Albright.
00:16:24 She said all that--
00:16:25 Bar?
00:16:26 That I said that stuff to her.
00:16:27 I was reading from the transcript of her deposition.
00:16:29 Why would you even need to depose her?
00:16:31 That's really for us to decide.
00:16:32 You think if I know she can make me look like a jerk,
00:16:34 I'll be more likely to settle?
00:16:35 Mark, why don't we stretch our legs for a minute?
00:16:37 Can we do that?
00:16:38 It's been almost three hours.
00:16:39 And frankly, you did spend an awful lot
00:16:41 of time embarrassing Mr. Zuckerberg
00:16:43 with the girl's testimony from the bar.
00:16:45 I'm not embarrassed.
00:16:45 She just made a lot of that up.
00:16:47 She was under oath.
00:16:48 Then I guess that would be the first time
00:16:49 somebody's lied under oath.
00:16:50 [FOOTSTEPS]
00:16:53 The site got 2,200 hits within two hours?
00:17:04 1,000.
00:17:05 What?
00:17:08 22,000.
00:17:12 Wow.
00:17:13 Yeah.
00:17:14 [WATER SPLASHING]
00:17:17 [WATER SPLASHING]
00:17:21 These guys are just freaking fast.
00:17:31 Is there any way to make this a fair fight?
00:17:40 Jump out and swim.
00:17:43 You'd have to jump out and drown.
00:17:45 Well, you could row forward, and I could row backward.
00:17:48 We're genetically identical.
00:17:49 Science says we'd stay in one place.
00:17:51 Just row the damn boat.
00:17:52 [WATER SPLASHING]
00:17:56 You guys hear about this?
00:18:02 What?
00:18:03 Two nights ago, a sophomore choked the network
00:18:05 from the laptop in Kirkland.
00:18:06 Really?
00:18:07 At 4 AM.
00:18:08 How?
00:18:09 He set up a website revoting the hotness of female undergrads.
00:18:13 What were we doing that none of us heard about this?
00:18:15 I don't know.
00:18:16 Three hour low rate technical row before breakfast.
00:18:18 Full course load, studying, another three hours in the tank,
00:18:21 and then studying.
00:18:22 Not sure how we missed it.
00:18:24 How much activity was there on this thing?
00:18:25 22,000 page requests.
00:18:28 22,000?
00:18:29 Cam, this guy hacked a Facebook of seven houses.
00:18:31 He set up the whole website in one night,
00:18:33 and he did it while he was drunk.
00:18:34 22,000.
00:18:36 How do you know he was drunk?
00:18:37 He was blogging simultaneously.
00:18:40 You know what I think?
00:18:41 Way ahead of you.
00:18:43 This is our guy.
00:18:45 Cameron Winklevoss, W-I-N-K-L-E-V-O-S-S.
00:18:50 Cameron spelled the usual way.
00:18:51 Tyler Winklevoss.
00:18:53 Tyler spelled the usual way, and my last name
00:18:54 is the same as my brother's.
00:18:56 Mr. Zuckerberg, this is an administrative board hearing.
00:19:00 You're being accused of intentionally
00:19:02 breaching security, violating copyrights,
00:19:05 violating individual privacy by creating the website
00:19:08 www.facemash.com.
00:19:10 You're also charged with being in violation
00:19:12 of university policy on distribution
00:19:14 of digitized images.
00:19:15 Before we begin with our questioning,
00:19:17 you're allowed to make a statement.
00:19:19 Would you like to do so?
00:19:20 You know, I've already apologized in the crimson
00:19:26 to the ABHW, to Fuerza Latina, and to any women at Harvard
00:19:31 who may have been insulted, as I take it that they were.
00:19:35 As for any charges stemming from the breach of security,
00:19:37 I believe I deserve some recognition from this board.
00:19:40 I'm sorry?
00:19:42 Yes.
00:19:43 I don't understand.
00:19:44 Which part?
00:19:46 You deserve recognition.
00:19:48 I believe I've pointed out some pretty gaping holes
00:19:50 in your system.
00:19:51 Excuse me, may I?
00:19:52 Yes.
00:19:54 Mr. Zuckerberg, I'm in charge of security
00:19:57 for all computers on the Harvard network,
00:19:59 and I can assure you of its sophistication.
00:20:01 In fact, it is that level of sophistication
00:20:03 that led us to you in less than four hours.
00:20:05 Four hours?
00:20:06 Yes, sir.
00:20:07 That would be impressive.
00:20:08 Except if you had known what you were looking for,
00:20:10 you would have seen it written on my dorm room window.
00:20:12 So?
00:20:18 Six months academic probation.
00:20:21 Wow.
00:20:22 They have to make an example out of you.
00:20:23 They had my blog.
00:20:25 I shouldn't have written that thing about the farm animals.
00:20:27 That was stupid.
00:20:28 But I was kidding, for God's sakes.
00:20:29 Doesn't anybody have a sense of humor?
00:20:31 I tried to stop you.
00:20:33 I know.
00:20:34 How do you do this thing where you manage
00:20:36 to get all girls to hate us?
00:20:38 Why do I let you?
00:20:39 I can't do that.
00:20:40 Why not?
00:20:41 I said I know.
00:20:42 OK, let's look at a sample problem.
00:20:44 Suppose we're given a computer with a 16-bit virtual address
00:20:48 and a page size of 256 bytes.
00:20:51 The system uses one-level page tables
00:20:53 that start at address hex 400.
00:20:56 Maybe you want DMA on your 16-bit system.
00:20:58 Who knows?
00:21:00 The first two pages are reserved for hardware flags, et cetera.
00:21:03 Assume page table entries happen.
00:21:05 The entries have eight status bits.
00:21:07 The eight status bits would then be--
00:21:10 anybody?
00:21:13 I see we have our first surrender.
00:21:15 Don't worry, Mr. Zuckerberg.
00:21:16 Writer men than you have tried and failed this class.
00:21:19 One valid bit, one modified bit, one reference bit,
00:21:21 five permission bits.
00:21:22 That is correct.
00:21:28 Does everybody see how he got there?
00:21:30 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:21:34 Mark?
00:21:37 You Mark Zuckerberg?
00:21:39 Yeah.
00:21:40 Cameron Winklevoss.
00:21:41 Hi.
00:21:42 Tyler Winklevoss.
00:21:43 You guys related?
00:21:45 That's good.
00:21:45 Funny.
00:21:46 I've never heard that before.
00:21:48 So what can I do for you?
00:21:49 Did I insult your girlfriends?
00:21:50 No, you didn't.
00:21:51 Actually--
00:21:52 I don't know.
00:21:52 Maybe never asked.
00:21:53 Maybe you should do that.
00:21:54 No.
00:21:55 We had an idea we wanted to talk to you about.
00:21:59 You got a minute?
00:21:59 You guys look like you spent some time at the gym.
00:22:03 We have to.
00:22:03 Why?
00:22:04 We're a crew.
00:22:07 Yeah, I've got a minute.
00:22:08 Great.
00:22:09 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:22:12 So you ever been inside the Porcelain?
00:22:15 No.
00:22:16 All right, we're going to stay.
00:22:16 We can't take you past the bike room
00:22:17 because you're not a member.
00:22:19 I've heard.
00:22:19 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:22:22 A sandwich or something?
00:22:24 Uh, OK.
00:22:26 Mark, right?
00:22:27 Yeah.
00:22:28 Mark, this is Divya Narendra, my partner.
00:22:29 Hi.
00:22:30 We were really impressed with FaceMatch.
00:22:31 We checked you out.
00:22:33 You also built CourseMatch.
00:22:34 I don't know CourseMatch.
00:22:35 You can go online and see what courses your friends are taking.
00:22:38 Really smart, man.
00:22:38 Mark.
00:22:42 Yeah?
00:22:43 We were talking about CourseMatch.
00:22:46 It was kind of a no-brainer.
00:22:48 You invented something in high school too, right?
00:22:50 An app for an MP3 player that recognizes
00:22:52 your taste in music.
00:22:54 Anybody trying to buy it?
00:22:56 Microsoft.
00:22:58 How much?
00:22:59 Didn't sell it.
00:23:00 Uploaded it for free.
00:23:01 For free?
00:23:02 Yeah.
00:23:03 Why?
00:23:06 OK, well, we have something that we've
00:23:08 been working on for a while.
00:23:09 We think it's great.
00:23:10 It's called the Harvard Connection.
00:23:11 You create your own page, interest, bio, friends, pics.
00:23:14 And then people can go online and see your bio, request.
00:23:17 Yeah, how is that different from MySpace or Friendster?
00:23:19 Harvard.edu.
00:23:25 Harvard.edu is the most prestigious email address
00:23:27 in the country.
00:23:27 The whole site's kind of based on the idea
00:23:29 that girls-- not to put anything indelicate,
00:23:31 girls want to get guys who go to Harvard.
00:23:33 Tiffy and my brother don't have trouble
00:23:35 putting things indelicate.
00:23:36 The main difference between what we're
00:23:37 talking about in MySpace or Friendster
00:23:39 or any of those other social networking sites--
00:23:41 Is exclusivity.
00:23:43 Right?
00:23:45 Right.
00:23:45 Yeah.
00:23:46 We'd love for you to work with us, Mark.
00:23:47 I mean, we need a gifted programmer who's creative.
00:23:49 And we know that you've been taking it to shames.
00:23:51 Women's groups are ready to declare a fatwa.
00:23:54 But this could help rehabilitate your image.
00:23:57 Well, you would do that for me.
00:23:59 We'd like to work with you.
00:24:03 Our first programmer graduated and went to work for Google.
00:24:06 Our second programmer just got overwhelmed with schoolwork.
00:24:09 We would need you to build the site and write the code.
00:24:11 And we'll provide all the--
00:24:12 I'm in.
00:24:15 What?
00:24:17 I'm in.
00:24:18 Awesome.
00:24:20 That's what you said.
00:24:22 It was three or four years ago.
00:24:23 I don't know what I said.
00:24:24 When did you come to Eduardo?
00:24:26 I don't understand that question.
00:24:28 You remember answering in the affirmative.
00:24:31 The affirmative?
00:24:32 When did you come to Eduardo with the idea for Facebook?
00:24:34 It was called The Facebook then.
00:24:36 This doesn't need to be that difficult.
00:24:39 I'm currently in the middle of two different lawsuits.
00:24:41 Did you answer affirmatively when Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss
00:24:44 and Divya Narendra asked you to build Harvard Connection,
00:24:47 did you say yes?
00:24:50 I said I'd help.
00:24:51 When did you approach Mr. Saverin
00:24:52 with the idea for The Facebook?
00:24:54 I wouldn't say I approached him.
00:24:56 Si?
00:24:57 You can answer the question.
00:24:58 At a party at Alpha Epsilon Pi.
00:25:01 What's that?
00:25:02 The Jewish fraternity.
00:25:05 It was Caribbean night.
00:25:06 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:10 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:13 It's not that guys like me are generally
00:25:25 attracted to Asian girls.
00:25:27 It's that Asian girls are generally attracted
00:25:28 to guys like me.
00:25:30 I'm developing an algorithm to define the connection
00:25:32 between Jewish guys and Asian girls.
00:25:34 I don't think it's that complicated.
00:25:35 They're hot, they're smart.
00:25:37 They're not Jewish, and they can't dance.
00:25:40 Hey, Mark's here.
00:25:41 Mark!
00:25:42 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:45 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:49 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:52 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:25:55 I think I've come up with something.
00:25:56 Hang on, I got to tell you something
00:25:57 that you're not going to believe.
00:25:58 What?
00:25:59 I got punched by the Phoenix.
00:26:03 Are you kidding?
00:26:04 No.
00:26:05 I mean, it's just the first enforcement process.
00:26:07 But they still have the invitation
00:26:08 under my door tonight.
00:26:09 I've got my first punch party tomorrow.
00:26:12 So you got punched by the Phoenix.
00:26:15 Yeah.
00:26:17 Probably just a diversity thing.
00:26:19 Just a diversity thing.
00:26:20 Just ride that horse until-- what
00:26:21 did you want to talk to me about?
00:26:23 Mark?
00:26:24 You said you'd come up with something.
00:26:25 Yeah, I think I've come up with something.
00:26:27 Come outside.
00:26:28 It's 20 degrees outside.
00:26:29 I can't stare at that loop of Niagara Falls,
00:26:31 which has absolutely nothing to do with the Caribbean.
00:26:33 Oh.
00:26:34 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:26:38 People came to FaceMash in a stampede, right?
00:26:47 Yeah.
00:26:48 But it wasn't because they saw pictures of hot girls.
00:26:50 You can go anywhere on the internet
00:26:51 and see pictures of hot girls.
00:26:52 Yeah.
00:26:53 It was because they saw pictures of girls that they knew.
00:26:56 People want to go on the internet
00:26:57 and check out their friends.
00:26:58 So why not build a website that offers that?
00:27:00 Friends, pictures, profiles, whatever you can visit,
00:27:03 browse around.
00:27:04 I'm not talking about someone you just met at a party.
00:27:05 But I'm not talking about a dating site.
00:27:07 I'm talking about taking the entire social experience
00:27:10 of college and putting it online.
00:27:13 I can't feel my legs.
00:27:14 I know.
00:27:15 I'm totally psyched about this too, but Wardo--
00:27:17 Yeah?
00:27:18 It would be exclusive.
00:27:20 You would have to know the people on the site
00:27:22 to get past your own page, like getting punched.
00:27:26 Well, that's good.
00:27:27 Wardo, it's like a final club, except we're the president.
00:27:30 I told him I thought it sounded great.
00:27:33 It was a great idea.
00:27:35 There was nothing to hack.
00:27:36 People were going to provide their own pictures,
00:27:38 their own information.
00:27:39 And people had the ability to invite or not invite
00:27:43 their friends to join.
00:27:44 See, in a world where social structure was everything,
00:27:48 that was the thing.
00:27:50 It was a big project, and he was going
00:27:53 to have to write tens of thousands of lines of code.
00:27:55 So I wondered why he was coming to me and not his roommates,
00:27:58 Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes.
00:27:59 They were programmers.
00:28:01 We're going to need a little startup cash to run the servers
00:28:03 and get it online.
00:28:05 So that was why.
00:28:06 Did he offer terms?
00:28:07 Yes.
00:28:08 Well, split it, 70/30.
00:28:10 70 for me, 30 for you for putting up $1,000
00:28:13 and for handling everything on the business end.
00:28:14 You're CFO.
00:28:15 And you said?
00:28:16 I said, let's do it.
00:28:18 OK, did he add anything else?
00:28:20 Yes.
00:28:21 It probably was a diversity thing.
00:28:29 But so what?
00:28:30 Why do you think he said that?
00:28:31 Gretchen, excuse me for interrupting,
00:28:33 but whose discovery is this?
00:28:34 Si, if you'll let me continue with my line of questioning--
00:28:36 They're suggesting I was jealous of Eduardo
00:28:38 for getting punched by the Phoenix
00:28:39 and began a plan to screw him out of a company
00:28:41 I hadn't even invented yet.
00:28:42 Were you?
00:28:43 Jealous of Eduardo.
00:28:44 Oh, stop typing.
00:28:44 We're off the record.
00:28:45 I know you've done your homework,
00:28:46 and so you know that money isn't a big part of my life.
00:28:48 But at the moment, I could buy Mount Auburn Street,
00:28:50 take the Phoenix Club, and turn it into my ping pong room.
00:28:52 I'll let you know how the party is.
00:28:59 [DOOR CREAKING]
00:29:02 [DOOR SLAMMING]
00:29:05 We recognize that you're a plaintiff in one
00:29:07 suit involving Facebook and a witness in another.
00:29:10 Yes, sir.
00:29:11 At any time in the weeks prior to Mark's telling you his idea,
00:29:14 did he mention Tyler Winklevoss, Cameron Winklevoss,
00:29:17 Divya Narendra, or Harvard Connection?
00:29:19 Yes.
00:29:20 He said they'd asked him to work on their site,
00:29:22 but that he looked at what they had and decided
00:29:24 it wasn't worth his time.
00:29:26 He said even his most pathetic friends
00:29:28 knew more about getting people interested
00:29:30 in the website than these guys.
00:29:32 These guys, meaning my clients?
00:29:34 Yes.
00:29:35 Mark resented that your clients thought
00:29:38 that he needed to rehabilitate his image after FaceMash.
00:29:40 Mark didn't want to rehabilitate anything with FaceMash.
00:29:43 He'd hacked into the Harvard computers.
00:29:45 He'd thumbed his nose at the ad board.
00:29:47 He'd gotten a lot of notoriety.
00:29:48 FaceMash did exactly what he wanted it to do.
00:29:50 Were you aware that while Mr. Zuckerberg was
00:29:52 building the Facebook, he was also
00:29:54 communicating with the plaintiffs?
00:29:55 Not at the time, I wasn't.
00:29:57 But it really didn't have much to do with the Winklevoss'
00:30:01 dating site. - How would you know?
00:30:03 You weren't even there.
00:30:05 Were you aware that while Mr. Zuckerberg was building
00:30:07 the Facebook, he was leading the plaintiffs to believe he
00:30:10 was building Harvard Connection?
00:30:11 You're offering a conclusion not found in evidence.
00:30:13 We are about to find it in evidence.
00:30:16 From Mark Zuckerberg to Tyler Winklevoss, November 30, 2003.
00:30:20 I read over all the stuff you sent me re Harvard Connection,
00:30:23 and it seems like it shouldn't take too long to implement.
00:30:26 So we can talk about it after I get all the basic functionality
00:30:29 of tomorrow night.
00:30:31 From Mark Zuckerberg to Cameron Winklevoss,
00:30:33 December 1, 2003.
00:30:35 Sorry I was unreachable tonight.
00:30:37 I just got about three of your missed calls.
00:30:39 I was working on a problem set for my systems class.
00:30:42 From Mark Zuckerberg to Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss,
00:30:44 December 10, 2003.
00:30:47 This week has been pretty busy thus far with classes and work,
00:30:50 so I think it's probably best to postpone the meeting.
00:30:52 I'm also really busy tomorrow.
00:30:55 OK, anybody else feel like there's
00:30:57 something up with this guy?
00:30:59 Tell him OK, but we do have to make sure that we meet up
00:31:01 before we all go off for break.
00:31:03 I know, I know.
00:31:04 Ciao, ciao.
00:31:05 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:31:09 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:31:37 Hey Mark, I need a dedicated Linux box running Apache
00:31:40 with a MySQL back end.
00:31:41 It's going to cost a little more money.
00:31:43 Not much more, about $200 more.
00:31:45 Do we need it?
00:31:47 Got to handle the traffic.
00:31:48 Do it.
00:31:52 I already did.
00:31:53 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:31:56 Hey, guess what?
00:32:00 I made the second cut.
00:32:02 That's good.
00:32:03 You should be proud of that right there.
00:32:04 Don't worry if you don't make it any further.
00:32:06 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:32:10 I'll get out of here.
00:32:13 From Mark Zuckerberg, Tyler and Cameron Winterboss,
00:32:16 and Divya Narendra, December 15, 2003.
00:32:19 I have a CS problem set that I'm just getting started with,
00:32:22 and it should be about 15 hours of coding,
00:32:24 so I'll be busy tomorrow night.
00:32:25 I won't really be free to meet until next Wednesday afternoon.
00:32:29 I have to cancel Wednesday afternoon.
00:32:31 I've basically been in the lab this whole time.
00:32:34 And also, I won't be able to do Saturday, as I
00:32:36 have to meet up with my parents.
00:32:38 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:32:41 How's the plaque read?
00:32:44 This is John Harbour, founder of Harvard University in 1638.
00:32:48 It's also called the Statue of Three Lies.
00:32:51 What are the three lies?
00:32:54 Mr. Dowd.
00:32:55 The three lies.
00:32:56 First, shit.
00:32:58 Take your pants off.
00:32:59 I know.
00:33:02 Mr. Sabra.
00:33:03 One, Harvard was founded in 1636, not 1638.
00:33:06 Two, Harvard was not founded by John Harvard.
00:33:09 And three, that is not John Harvard.
00:33:10 Who is it?
00:33:11 Miranda the Sculptor, Daniel.
00:33:15 Chester.
00:33:17 Keep your jacket on.
00:33:19 [GROANING]
00:33:22 39 days after Mr. Zuckerberg's initial meeting
00:33:25 with my clients, and he still hadn't completed
00:33:27 work on Harvard Connection.
00:33:29 But on January 11, 2004, Mr. Zuckerberg
00:33:33 registered the domain name to Facebook
00:33:36 via network solutions.
00:33:40 To the best of your knowledge, he'd even
00:33:41 begun work on Harvard Connection.
00:33:45 Not to my knowledge, no.
00:33:46 What in the world is this?
00:33:54 Hey, Cameron, I'm still a little skeptical
00:33:57 that we have enough functionality in the site
00:33:59 to really draw the attention and gain the critical mass
00:34:01 necessary to get a site like this to run.
00:34:04 We'll speak soon?
00:34:05 This is the first time he mentioned any problem.
00:34:11 Yes, it was.
00:34:12 You sent 36 emails to Mr. Zuckerberg
00:34:15 and received 16 emails in return,
00:34:17 and this was the first time he indicated he was not happy.
00:34:19 That's correct.
00:34:20 You had 42 days to study our system and get out ahead.
00:34:23 Do you see any of your code on Facebook?
00:34:25 I could--
00:34:26 Did I use any of your code?
00:34:27 You stole our whole goddamn idea.
00:34:29 Fellas, we're Match.com for Harvard, guys.
00:34:31 Can I continue with my deposition?
00:34:33 You know, you really don't need a forensics team
00:34:34 to get to the bottom of this.
00:34:35 If you guys were the inventors of Facebook,
00:34:39 you'd have invented Facebook.
00:34:41 I can't wait to stand over your shoulder
00:34:43 and watch you write us a check.
00:34:45 No shit.
00:34:47 Let's continue.
00:34:50 February 4, 2004.
00:34:56 Mark.
00:34:58 Mark, there is a girl in your art history class.
00:35:02 Her name is Stephanie Addis.
00:35:03 Do you happen to know if she has a boyfriend?
00:35:07 Have you ever seen her with anyone?
00:35:10 And if not, do you happen to know if she's
00:35:13 looking to go out with anyone?
00:35:14 Justin.
00:35:15 People don't walk around with a sign on them that says them.
00:35:25 Mark?
00:35:52 Supposed to be the diet.
00:35:55 You slept yet?
00:35:55 I have to add something.
00:35:57 What?
00:35:58 Shit, that looks good.
00:36:11 That looks really good.
00:36:12 It's clean and simple.
00:36:13 No Disneyland, no live new girls.
00:36:16 Watch.
00:36:18 Watch you write.
00:36:20 Relationship status, interested in.
00:36:23 This is what drives life in college.
00:36:24 Are you having sex or aren't you?
00:36:26 It's why people take certain classes
00:36:27 and sit where they sit and do what they do.
00:36:29 When at some center, you know, that's
00:36:31 what the Facebook is going to be about.
00:36:33 People are going to log on because after all the cake
00:36:35 and watermelon, there's a chance they're actually
00:36:36 going to get laid.
00:36:37 Meet a girl.
00:36:38 Yes.
00:36:39 That is really good.
00:36:41 And that was it.
00:36:42 What do you mean?
00:36:42 It's ready.
00:36:43 It's ready?
00:36:43 Yeah.
00:36:44 Right now?
00:36:44 That was it.
00:36:46 Here's the mastid.
00:36:48 You made a mastid?
00:36:49 Yeah.
00:36:49 Eduardo Severin, co-founder, and CFO.
00:36:52 Yeah.
00:36:52 You have no idea what that's going to mean to my father.
00:36:55 Sure I do.
00:36:56 So when's it going live?
00:37:01 Right now.
00:37:03 Get your laptop out.
00:37:04 What?
00:37:05 Why do you need my laptop?
00:37:06 Because you got emails for everybody in Phoenix.
00:37:10 Oh.
00:37:10 Yeah, I'm not sure if it's going to be cool of them
00:37:16 that I've spammed their email.
00:37:18 This is not spam.
00:37:19 No, I know it's not spam.
00:37:20 If we send it to our friends, it's
00:37:21 just going to bounce around Dworkin.
00:37:23 I haven't gotten in yet.
00:37:24 These guys know people, and I need their emails.
00:37:29 Sure.
00:37:32 Give me the mailing list.
00:37:33 Jabberwock12.listserv@harvard.edu.
00:37:35 These guys, they're literary geniuses
00:37:37 because the world's most obvious Lewis Carroll references
00:37:39 in there.
00:37:40 Not so bad.
00:37:40 I'm just saying.
00:37:41 Yeah, you're right.
00:37:42 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:37:45 Sidesline.
00:37:52 You know, let's go get a drink and celebrate.
00:37:56 I'm buying.
00:37:59 Mark.
00:38:00 Mark, are you praying?
00:38:06 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:38:10 What ever happened to Cole Porter and Irving Berlin?
00:38:20 It's a Valentine's Day theme.
00:38:21 They're playing love songs.
00:38:23 Good point, because Cole Porter and Irving Berlin
00:38:25 never wrote any love songs.
00:38:26 [CHUCKLES]
00:38:30 Honey, you should bring your laptop away.
00:38:33 Seven different people spammed me the same link.
00:38:35 OK, I see it.
00:38:36 What is it?
00:38:36 I don't know.
00:38:38 I'm really hoping it's cats that look like Hitler,
00:38:40 because I can never get enough of that.
00:38:43 No, it's not.
00:38:44 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:38:47 Dude.
00:38:51 What?
00:38:52 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:38:56 Hey, what-- what is wrong?
00:39:01 [GUNSHOT]
00:39:02 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:39:05 It's fine.
00:39:06 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:39:10 Hey.
00:39:23 Hey!
00:39:24 Not now.
00:39:25 I need 20 minutes.
00:39:27 OK.
00:39:29 I just wanted to let you know that Zuckerberg
00:39:31 stole our website.
00:39:34 Mark Zuckerberg?
00:39:36 He stole our website.
00:39:39 It's been live for more than 36 hours.
00:39:41 Mr. Hotchkiss.
00:39:47 Ty, blurry's on the phone.
00:39:48 Dad.
00:39:48 Yes, sir, I'm here with my brother Tyler
00:39:50 and our business partner, Divya.
00:39:51 Welcome to the Facebook.
00:39:52 The Facebook is an online directory
00:39:53 that connects people through different social networks.
00:39:55 You must have a harvard.edu address to register.
00:39:58 That's right. Yes, sir.
00:39:59 Yeah, I called earlier.
00:40:00 I'm looking for Mark Zuckerberg.
00:40:01 Yes, sir, he's actually quoted a couple times.
00:40:03 You can read it here.
00:40:04 Everyone's been talking a lot about a universal Facebook
00:40:06 within Harvard, he says.
00:40:07 I don't need him anymore.
00:40:08 I think it's kind of silly that it
00:40:09 would take the university a couple of years
00:40:11 to get around to it.
00:40:11 I can do a classier job than they can, and I did it--
00:40:14 And tell him Divya Narendra called?
00:40:15 I don't know if that's how he talks.
00:40:16 Appreciate it.
00:40:17 As of yesterday evening, Zuckerberg
00:40:19 said over 650 students had registered
00:40:22 to use the Facebook.com.
00:40:23 He said he anticipated that 900 students would have
00:40:26 joined the site by this morning.
00:40:27 Yeah, Divya was just reading that 650 students signed
00:40:29 up for it on the first day.
00:40:30 God, if I was a drug dealer, I couldn't
00:40:32 give free drugs to 650 people in one day.
00:40:35 This guy doesn't have three friends to rub
00:40:37 together to make a fourth.
00:40:38 All right, yes, that's what we'll do, Mr. Hotchkiss.
00:40:40 We'll put all this together, and we'll email it to you.
00:40:42 Well, you won't be able to go on the website yourself,
00:40:45 because you don't have a Harvard--
00:40:47 you know what, it would just be easier for us to email it to you.
00:40:50 I'm sure you're right.
00:40:51 He's a good guy, and he's very bright,
00:40:52 and I'm sure he didn't mean to do--
00:40:54 Wow.
00:40:55 --what he did.
00:40:57 Thank you very much.
00:40:58 And Dad, all right, love you too.
00:41:00 This is a good guy?
00:41:02 We don't know that he's not a good guy.
00:41:03 We know he stole our idea.
00:41:04 We know he lied to our faces for a month and a half.
00:41:06 No, he never lied to our faces.
00:41:07 OK, he never saw our faces. Fine.
00:41:08 He lied to our email accounts, and he gave
00:41:10 himself a 42-day head start because he
00:41:12 knows what apparently you don't, which is that getting
00:41:14 there first is everything.
00:41:15 I'm a competitive racer, Dave.
00:41:17 I don't think you need to school me on the importance
00:41:18 of getting there first. Thank you.
00:41:20 All right.
00:41:20 That was your father's lawyer.
00:41:21 This is in-house counsel.
00:41:22 He's going to look at all this, and if he
00:41:23 thinks it's appropriate, he'll send a cease and desist letter.
00:41:25 What's that going to do?
00:41:26 What, do you want to hire an IP lawyer and sue him?
00:41:28 No, I want to hire the Sopranos to beat
00:41:30 the shit out of him with a hammer.
00:41:31 We don't even have to do that.
00:41:32 That's right.
00:41:33 We can do that ourselves.
00:41:34 I'm 6'5", 220, and there's two of me.
00:41:36 I'm with this guy.
00:41:37 Well, whatever.
00:41:37 I'm saying let's calm down until we
00:41:38 know what we're talking about.
00:41:39 How much more information are you waiting for?
00:41:42 We met with Mark three times.
00:41:43 We exchanged 52 emails.
00:41:45 We can prove that he looked at the code.
00:41:46 What is that on the bottom of the page?
00:41:48 This is a Mark Zuckerberg production.
00:41:49 On the home page?
00:41:50 On every page.
00:41:52 Shit, I need a second to let the classiness waft over me.
00:41:55 OK, look, we don't know--
00:41:56 They wrote Zuckerberg said he hoped the privacy
00:41:57 reductions would help restore his reputation following
00:42:00 student outrage over facesmash.com.
00:42:03 That's exactly what we said to him.
00:42:04 He's giving us the finger in the crimson.
00:42:07 Now, while we're waiting for dad's lawyer
00:42:08 to look this stuff over, we can at least
00:42:09 get something going in the paper--
00:42:10 No.
00:42:11 --so people know--
00:42:11 What?
00:42:12 --that this is in dispute.
00:42:13 We're not starting a knife fight in the crimson,
00:42:15 and we're not suing anybody.
00:42:17 Why not?
00:42:20 I don't understand.
00:42:21 Why not?
00:42:23 He's going to say it's stupid.
00:42:25 What, who, me?
00:42:27 Say it.
00:42:27 Why not?
00:42:29 Because we're gentlemen of Harvard.
00:42:31 This is Harvard, where you don't plant stories,
00:42:34 and you don't sue people.
00:42:36 You thought he was going to be the only one who
00:42:38 thought that was stupid?
00:42:39 During the time when you say you had this idea,
00:42:43 did you know Tyler and Cameron came from a family of means?
00:42:47 A family of means?
00:42:48 Did you know their father was wealthy?
00:42:51 I'm not sure why you're asking me that.
00:42:53 It's not important.
00:42:53 You'll be sure why I'm asking.
00:42:55 It's not important to you.
00:42:56 Because I--
00:42:58 Did you know that they came from money?
00:43:00 I had no idea whether they came from money or not.
00:43:02 In one of your emails to Mr. Narendra,
00:43:04 you referenced Howard Winklevoss' consulting firm,
00:43:07 if you say so.
00:43:09 Howard Winklevoss founded a firm whose assets
00:43:11 are in the hundreds of millions.
00:43:12 You also knew Tyler and Cameron were
00:43:14 members of a Harvard final club called the Purcellian.
00:43:17 They pointed that out?
00:43:18 Excuse us for inviting you in.
00:43:20 To the bike room, please.
00:43:22 So it's safe to say you were aware
00:43:24 that my clients had money?
00:43:27 Yes.
00:43:28 Let me tell you why I'm asking.
00:43:29 I'm wondering why, if you needed $1,000 for an internet venture,
00:43:33 you didn't ask my clients for it.
00:43:34 They had demonstrated an interest
00:43:36 to you in that kind of thing.
00:43:37 I went to my friend for the money
00:43:38 because that's who I wanted to be partners with.
00:43:40 Eduardo was the president of the Harvard Investors Association,
00:43:43 and he was also my best friend.
00:43:45 Your best friend is suing you for $600 million.
00:43:49 I didn't know that.
00:43:50 Tell me more.
00:43:51 Eduardo, what happened after the initial launch?
00:43:54 I'm sorry, Cy, would you mind addressing him as Mr. Savrin?
00:43:56 Gretchen, they're best friends.
00:43:58 Not anymore.
00:43:58 We already went through this on the-- never mind.
00:44:00 Mr. Savrin, what happened after the initial launch?
00:44:03 It exploded.
00:44:04 Everybody on campus was using it.
00:44:06 Facebook me.
00:44:08 It was a common expression after two weeks.
00:44:10 And Mark?
00:44:12 And Mark was the biggest thing on campus.
00:44:14 It included 19 Nobel laureates, 15 post-surprise winners,
00:44:17 two future Olympians, and a movie star.
00:44:21 Who was the movie star?
00:44:22 Doesn't matter.
00:44:23 It was a beautiful day, and I was in my Radcliffe dorm room.
00:44:36 He brought that magazine up, and he showed it to me.
00:44:38 He said, look, it's going to happen with Alice.
00:44:40 We've got to start now.
00:44:42 I said, OK.
00:44:44 Let's get basic copware.
00:44:46 Now, most of you think you know the rest of the story,
00:44:48 but you may not.
00:44:49 The beginnings of this industry were very humble.
00:44:51 That computer on the cover of that magazine
00:44:53 had an 8080 processor in it.
00:44:56 Unless you paid extra for a 1K memory board,
00:44:58 you got 256 bytes.
00:45:00 So the challenge when I wrote basic
00:45:02 wasn't just to run at 4K bytes, but I also
00:45:05 had to leave room for the users to run
00:45:07 their programs in 4K bytes.
00:45:10 You're from--
00:45:11 Is that Mark Zuckerberg?
00:45:12 They can save me 1K.
00:45:14 You made the Facebook?
00:45:15 I pay him $20.
00:45:16 I mean, it's both of our jobs.
00:45:18 I know.
00:45:19 Yeah.
00:45:20 Yes.
00:45:21 Cool.
00:45:22 I'm Christy Lane.
00:45:23 This is Alice.
00:45:24 Hi.
00:45:25 How are you?
00:45:26 Nice to meet you.
00:45:27 Facebook me when you get home.
00:45:29 Yeah, me when I get home.
00:45:30 Go out and grab a drink.
00:45:31 Certainly.
00:45:32 I'd absolutely do that.
00:45:34 They all ran basic.
00:45:36 So you turn it on, the screen, the monitor.
00:45:40 It's all in translate.
00:45:41 She said, Facebook me.
00:45:43 And we can all go for a drink later, which is
00:45:45 still only great for two reasons.
00:45:46 One, she said, Facebook me, right?
00:45:48 And then the other is--
00:45:49 I want to have drinks later.
00:45:50 Yes.
00:45:51 Have you ever heard so many different good things
00:45:52 packed into one regular-sized sentence?
00:45:53 Excuse me, Mark?
00:45:56 Yeah.
00:45:57 I'm Stuart Singer.
00:45:58 I'm in your OS lab.
00:45:59 Sure.
00:46:01 Awesome job with the Facebook.
00:46:02 Awesome job.
00:46:03 Thanks.
00:46:04 I'm Bob.
00:46:05 How you doing?
00:46:06 You know, I could swear he was looking at you when he said
00:46:08 the next Bill Gates could be right in this room.
00:46:11 I doubt it.
00:46:12 I showed up late.
00:46:13 I don't even know who the speaker was.
00:46:16 It was Bill Gates.
00:46:18 Shit, that makes sense.
00:46:21 All right.
00:46:22 Thanks, guys.
00:46:23 You moron.
00:46:27 You can't do a Bill Gates.
00:46:28 I mean, for an ally--
00:46:29 [INTERPOSING VOICES]
00:46:30 --we got into Harvard on a dimly-scaled--
00:46:32 I'm going to glock and kill you.
00:46:35 Time to monetize the thing.
00:46:37 What were their needs?
00:46:38 Hear what I just said?
00:46:39 What?
00:46:40 I said it's time to monetize the site.
00:46:43 What does that mean?
00:46:44 It means it's time for the website
00:46:46 to start generating revenue.
00:46:47 No, I know what the word means.
00:46:48 I'm asking how you want to do it.
00:46:51 Advertising.
00:46:52 No.
00:46:53 Well, we've got 4,000 members.
00:46:55 Because the Facebook is cool.
00:46:56 And if we start installing pop-ups for Mountain Dew,
00:46:58 it's not going to be cool.
00:46:59 Well, I wasn't thinking Mountain Dew, but at some point.
00:47:01 And I'm talking as the business head of the company.
00:47:03 The site--
00:47:04 We don't even know what it is yet.
00:47:05 We don't know what it is.
00:47:07 We don't know what it can be.
00:47:08 We don't know what it will be.
00:47:10 We know that it is cool.
00:47:12 That is a priceless asset.
00:47:13 I'm not giving up.
00:47:14 So it won't be finished.
00:47:15 It won't be finished.
00:47:16 That's the point.
00:47:17 The way fashion's never finished.
00:47:18 What?
00:47:19 Fashion.
00:47:20 Fashion is never finished.
00:47:21 You're talking about fashion.
00:47:22 Really, you--
00:47:23 I'm talking about the idea of it,
00:47:24 and I'm saying that it's never finished.
00:47:25 OK.
00:47:26 But they managed to make money selling pants.
00:47:28 Um, Mark, what is this?
00:47:31 A what?
00:47:32 This.
00:47:33 It's called a cease and desist letter.
00:47:34 What were their names?
00:47:35 Who?
00:47:36 The girls.
00:47:37 When did you get this?
00:47:38 About 10 days ago, right after we launched the site.
00:47:39 Jesus Christ.
00:47:40 Hey, the girls.
00:47:41 What were their names?
00:47:42 The Winklevoss twins are saying that you stole their idea.
00:47:44 I find that to be a little more than mildly annoying.
00:47:46 Oh, well, they find it to be intellectual property theft.
00:47:49 Look, why didn't you show this to me?
00:47:51 It was addressed to me.
00:47:53 They're saying that we stole the Facebook
00:47:55 from Divya Narendra and the Winklevoss--
00:47:56 I know what it says.
00:47:57 Did we?
00:47:58 Did we what?
00:47:59 Don't screw around with me now.
00:48:00 Look at me.
00:48:01 The letter says we could face legal action.
00:48:03 No, it says I could face legal action.
00:48:05 This is from a lawyer, Mark.
00:48:06 They must feel they have some ground.
00:48:08 The lawyer is their father's house counsel.
00:48:10 Do they have ground?
00:48:11 The grounds are our thing is cool and popular
00:48:13 and Harvard Connection is lame.
00:48:14 Wardo, I didn't use any of their code.
00:48:16 I promise, I didn't use anything.
00:48:17 Look, a guy who built a nice chair
00:48:19 doesn't owe money to everyone who ever has built a chair.
00:48:21 Okay, they came to me with an idea.
00:48:22 I had a better one.
00:48:23 Why didn't you show me this letter?
00:48:24 I didn't think it was a big deal.
00:48:26 [sighs]
00:48:28 Okay.
00:48:30 So, if there's something wrong,
00:48:32 if there's ever anything wrong,
00:48:35 you can tell me.
00:48:36 I'm the guy that wants to help.
00:48:38 This is our thing.
00:48:39 Now, is there anything that you need to tell me?
00:48:43 No.
00:48:44 What are we doing about this?
00:48:49 I went to a 3L at Student Legal Services
00:48:51 and he told me to write them back.
00:48:52 And what did you say?
00:48:53 When we met in January,
00:48:55 I expressed my doubts about the site,
00:48:57 where it stood with graphics,
00:48:58 how much programming was left that I had not anticipated.
00:49:01 The lack of hardware we had to deal with,
00:49:02 site use, the lack of promotion,
00:49:04 then we'll go on to successfully launch the website.
00:49:06 This was the first time you raised any of those concerns, right?
00:49:10 I'd raised concerns before.
00:49:11 Bullshit.
00:49:12 Not to us.
00:49:13 Gentlemen, I'm talking about at the meeting in January
00:49:15 to which this letter is referring.
00:49:17 Yeah.
00:49:18 Let me rephrase this.
00:49:20 You sent my client 16 emails.
00:49:22 In the first 15, you didn't raise any concerns.
00:49:25 Is that a question?
00:49:26 In the 16th email,
00:49:27 you raised concerns about the site's functionality.
00:49:30 Were you leading them on for six weeks?
00:49:32 No.
00:49:33 Then why didn't you raise any of these concerns before?
00:49:36 It's raining.
00:49:37 I'm sorry?
00:49:38 It just started raining.
00:49:39 Mr. Zuckerberg, do I have your full attention?
00:49:43 No.
00:49:45 Do you think I deserve it?
00:49:47 What?
00:49:48 Do you think I deserve your full attention?
00:49:51 I had to swear an oath before we began this deposition,
00:49:54 and I don't want to perjure myself,
00:49:55 so I have a legal obligation to say no.
00:49:57 Okay, no.
00:49:59 You don't think I deserve your attention?
00:50:01 I think if your clients want to sit on my shoulders
00:50:03 and call themselves tall,
00:50:04 they have a right to give it a try,
00:50:05 but there's no requirement that I enjoy sitting here
00:50:07 listening to people lie.
00:50:09 You have part of my attention.
00:50:11 You have the minimum amount.
00:50:13 The rest of my attention is back at the offices of Facebook,
00:50:15 where my colleagues and I are doing things
00:50:17 that no one in this room, including and especially your clients,
00:50:19 are intellectually or creatively capable of doing.
00:50:23 Did I adequately answer your condescending question?
00:50:28 [eerie music]
00:50:31 ♪ ♪
00:50:34 I have 12.45.
00:50:36 Why don't we say that's lunch?
00:50:39 Back at 2.30.
00:50:41 So, uh, what were their names?
00:50:45 Their names were Christy and Alice.
00:50:49 And they want to have drinks tonight.
00:50:54 [indistinct chatter]
00:50:57 ♪ ♪
00:51:05 [indistinct chatter]
00:51:08 ♪ ♪
00:51:15 I don't care.
00:51:21 ♪ ♪
00:51:29 [indistinct chatter]
00:51:32 ♪ ♪
00:51:39 Hey, man, sorry.
00:51:45 Got the girl who's freshening up in there.
00:51:48 Sweet.
00:51:50 Yeah, groupies.
00:51:57 [indistinct chatter]
00:52:00 ♪ ♪
00:52:03 I'll be right back.
00:52:05 How are we going?
00:52:07 Mark.
00:52:09 Erica?
00:52:14 Hi.
00:52:16 I saw you from over there.
00:52:18 I didn't know you came to this club.
00:52:20 First time.
00:52:21 Mine too.
00:52:22 Could I talk to you alone for a second?
00:52:24 I think I'm good right here.
00:52:26 I just--I'd love to talk to you alone.
00:52:28 If we could just go someplace--
00:52:30 Right here is fine.
00:52:32 I don't know if you heard about this new website I launched.
00:52:34 No.
00:52:35 The Facebook--
00:52:36 You called me a bitch on the Internet, Mark.
00:52:38 That's why I wanted to talk to you.
00:52:40 On the Internet.
00:52:41 That's why I came over.
00:52:43 Comparing women to farm animals.
00:52:45 I didn't end up doing that.
00:52:46 I didn't stop you from writing it.
00:52:48 As if every thought that tumbles through your head
00:52:50 was so clever it would be a crime for it not to be shared.
00:52:53 The Internet's not written in pencil, Mark.
00:52:56 It's written in ink.
00:52:58 And you published that Erica Albright was a bitch
00:53:00 right before you made some ignorant crack
00:53:02 about my family's name, my bra size,
00:53:05 and then rated women based on their hotness.
00:53:07 Erica, is there a problem?
00:53:09 No, there's no problem.
00:53:11 You write your snide bullshit from a dark room
00:53:13 because that's what the angry do nowadays.
00:53:16 I was nice to you.
00:53:18 Don't torture me for it.
00:53:19 If we could just go somewhere for a minute.
00:53:21 I don't want to be rude to my friends.
00:53:23 Okay.
00:53:25 Okay.
00:53:27 Good luck with your video game.
00:53:30 Hey, that was great.
00:53:31 That was the right thing to do.
00:53:32 You apologized, right?
00:53:34 We have to expand.
00:53:38 What, more?
00:53:40 Is he mad about something?
00:53:44 Okay, we are expanding to Yale and Columbia.
00:53:47 Dustin, I want you to share the coding work with me.
00:53:49 Chris, you're going to be in charge of publicity and outreach,
00:53:50 and you can start by getting a story
00:53:51 in the BU student newspaper.
00:53:52 It's the Bridge.
00:53:53 They hate doing stories about Harvard.
00:53:55 Somebody at the newspaper will be a computer science major.
00:53:57 Tell them that Mark Zuckerberg
00:53:58 will do ten hours of free programming.
00:53:59 Why do you want a story in the BU newspaper?
00:54:01 Because I do.
00:54:02 Now, here's the arrangement.
00:54:03 Eduardo is CFO and owns 30% of the company.
00:54:05 Dustin is vice president and head of programming,
00:54:06 and his 5% of the company will come from my end.
00:54:09 Chris is director of publicity,
00:54:10 and his compensation will depend
00:54:11 on the amount of work he ends up doing.
00:54:13 Any questions?
00:54:14 Who are the girls?
00:54:15 Sorry, um, Christy and Alice.
00:54:17 Hi.
00:54:18 Hi.
00:54:19 Hello.
00:54:20 Hi.
00:54:21 Is there anything we can do?
00:54:22 No.
00:54:23 That's it.
00:54:24 Yale and Columbia, let's go.
00:54:25 And Stanford.
00:54:26 What?
00:54:27 Stanford.
00:54:28 It's time for them to see this in Palo Alto.
00:54:31 You don't want any lunch?
00:54:38 No.
00:54:39 You're welcome to some salad.
00:54:41 No, thank you.
00:54:43 This must be hard.
00:54:46 Who are you?
00:54:47 I'm Marilyn Delpy.
00:54:49 I introduced myself when--
00:54:50 I mean, what do you do?
00:54:51 I'm a second-year associate at the firm.
00:54:53 My boss wanted me to sit in on the deposition phase.
00:54:57 What are you doing?
00:54:58 Checking in to see how it's going in Bosnia.
00:55:01 Bosnia?
00:55:02 They don't have roads, but they have Facebook.
00:55:05 I'm sorry, I'm not sure I understand.
00:55:07 I'm sorry, I'm not sure I understand.
00:55:09 They don't have roads, but they have Facebook.
00:55:12 You must really hate the Winklevosses.
00:55:21 I don't hate anybody.
00:55:23 The Winklevi aren't suing me for intellectual property theft.
00:55:27 They are suing me because for the first time in their lives,
00:55:30 things didn't work out the way they were supposed to for them.
00:55:34 [sighs]
00:55:36 He's expanding.
00:55:42 What?
00:55:43 He's expanding to Yale, Columbia, and Stanford.
00:55:45 He's gonna be in the Crimson tomorrow.
00:55:46 Really?
00:55:47 Yep.
00:55:48 Well, looks like that cease-and-desist letter
00:55:49 really scared the shit out of him, huh?
00:55:51 I want to hire a lawyer to file for injunctive relief
00:55:53 and get the site taken down now.
00:55:54 Look--
00:55:55 Every minute the site is up,
00:55:56 Harvard Connection becomes less valuable.
00:55:57 I want an injunction, I want damages,
00:55:59 I want punitive relief, and I want him dead.
00:56:01 Yeah, I want those things, too.
00:56:02 Are we doing anything about it
00:56:03 because we're gentlemen of Harvard?
00:56:04 No, it's because you're not thinking how it's gonna look.
00:56:06 How is it gonna look?
00:56:07 Like my brother and I are in skeleton costumes
00:56:09 chasing a karate kid around a high school gym.
00:56:11 Cam, he's violated Massachusetts state law.
00:56:15 When he goes to Connecticut, New York, and California,
00:56:17 he'll have violated federal law.
00:56:18 And by the way, he's in violation of Harvard law.
00:56:20 There's no such thing as Harvard law.
00:56:22 Wait.
00:56:23 Yeah.
00:56:24 There is.
00:56:25 Harvard student handbook.
00:56:31 Every freshman is issued one of these.
00:56:32 And somewhere in this book, it says
00:56:34 you can't steal from another student.
00:56:37 This is what we needed.
00:56:38 We're going to Summers.
00:56:39 But you can't get a meeting with Larry Summers.
00:56:41 My brother and I, we pay tuition at this school.
00:56:43 We carry a 3.9 GPA at this school.
00:56:45 We won trophies for this school,
00:56:46 and we'll be rowing in the Olympics for this school.
00:56:49 I want a meeting with the goddamn president of this school.
00:56:52 Why Stanford?
00:56:54 Why do you think?
00:57:00 Sorry.
00:57:01 I'll wait for Biokin.
00:57:03 Okay.
00:57:05 You don't know my name, do you?
00:57:10 Is it Stanford?
00:57:12 I should just kick your ass.
00:57:14 How do you go to a party and you meet somebody--
00:57:16 Amelia Ritter.
00:57:17 But you prefer Amy.
00:57:19 You're from Orinda.
00:57:20 Your father's in commercial real estate,
00:57:21 and your mother's 10 years sober.
00:57:23 What's my major?
00:57:25 Trombone.
00:57:26 Really?
00:57:27 I remember something about a trombone.
00:57:29 Tu fais l'amour à la jolie tête et la nez te couche.
00:57:33 French.
00:57:34 Oui.
00:57:35 Your major's French.
00:57:36 And yours?
00:57:37 Mine? I don't have one.
00:57:38 You haven't declared?
00:57:40 I don't go to school.
00:57:42 You're kidding.
00:57:43 No.
00:57:44 Well, where did you go to school?
00:57:46 William Taft Elementary for a little while.
00:57:49 Seriously?
00:57:50 You're not, like, 15 years old or anything, are you?
00:57:53 No.
00:57:55 You're not, like, 15, are you?
00:57:57 No.
00:57:59 So what do you do?
00:58:02 I'm an entrepreneur.
00:58:04 You're unemployed.
00:58:05 I wouldn't say that.
00:58:06 What would you say?
00:58:07 That I'm an entrepreneur.
00:58:09 Well, then what was your latest preneur?
00:58:11 Well, I founded an Internet company
00:58:12 that let folks download and share music for free.
00:58:15 Kind of like Napster?
00:58:16 Exactly like Napster.
00:58:18 What do you mean?
00:58:20 I founded Napster.
00:58:21 Sean Parker founded Napster.
00:58:23 Nice to meet you.
00:58:25 You're Sean Parker?
00:58:26 Aha, you see, the shoes on the other, uh...
00:58:28 Foot.
00:58:29 Table, which is turned.
00:58:31 I just slept with Sean Parker.
00:58:33 You just slept on Sean Parker.
00:58:35 You're a zillionaire.
00:58:37 Not technically.
00:58:38 What are you?
00:58:39 Broke.
00:58:40 There's not a lot of money in free music,
00:58:42 even less when you're being sued
00:58:43 by everyone who's ever been to the Grammys.
00:58:45 This is blowing my mind.
00:58:47 I appreciate that.
00:58:48 I gotta hop in the shower and get ready for class.
00:58:50 Biochem, even though you're a French major
00:58:52 whose name is Amy.
00:58:54 You passed.
00:58:55 I'm a hard worker.
00:58:57 There's, um, there's juice or anything else
00:59:00 you can find.
00:59:01 Help yourself.
00:59:02 You mind if I check my email?
00:59:03 Yeah, go ahead.
00:59:05 Amy!
00:59:16 Amy!
00:59:20 Yeah?
00:59:21 Can you come out here?
00:59:22 Just a second.
00:59:24 What is it?
00:59:25 There's a snake in here, Amy.
00:59:30 What?
00:59:31 Where?
00:59:34 Okay, there isn't a snake,
00:59:35 but I need to ask you something.
00:59:36 Are you kidding me?
00:59:37 I could have been killed.
00:59:38 How?
00:59:39 By running too fast?
00:59:41 And getting twisted in the cart?
00:59:43 What do you need to ask me?
00:59:44 Yeah, I went to check my email,
00:59:45 and there's a website open on your computer.
00:59:48 Yeah, after you passed out last night,
00:59:50 I went on the Facebook for a little bit.
00:59:52 What's that?
00:59:53 Facebook?
00:59:54 Stanford's had it for, like, two weeks now.
00:59:57 It's really awesome,
00:59:58 except it's freakishly addictive.
01:00:00 Seriously, I'm on this thing like five times a day.
01:00:03 Mind if I send myself an email?
01:00:04 Yeah, is everything okay?
01:00:06 Everything's great.
01:00:08 I just need to find...
01:00:11 you, Mark Zuckerberg.
01:00:13 Never been in this building before.
01:00:18 This building's a hundred years older
01:00:20 than the country it's in,
01:00:21 so do be careful.
01:00:23 We're sitting in chairs.
01:00:25 [phone rings]
01:00:26 Yes.
01:00:28 Very good.
01:00:29 You can go in now.
01:00:31 That's their own stupidity.
01:00:36 I should have been there.
01:00:38 Well, darkness is the absence of light,
01:00:39 and the stupidity in that instance
01:00:41 was the absence of me.
01:00:42 Catherine, I've got students in my office now.
01:00:44 Students.
01:00:45 Undergrads.
01:00:47 I don't know.
01:00:48 From the looks of it,
01:00:49 you want to sell me a Brooks Brothers franchise.
01:00:51 All right.
01:00:52 Good morning.
01:00:53 Good morning, sir.
01:00:54 I'm Cameron Winklevoss,
01:00:55 and this is my brother, Ty.
01:00:56 And you're here because...
01:00:58 either of you can answer.
01:01:01 I'm sorry, sir.
01:01:02 I thought you were reading the letter.
01:01:03 Read the letter.
01:01:04 Well, we came up with an idea
01:01:05 for a website called Harvard Connection.
01:01:07 We've since changed the name to ConnectU,
01:01:09 and Mark Zuckerberg stole that idea.
01:01:11 I understand,
01:01:12 and I'm asking what you want me to do about it.
01:01:14 Well, sir,
01:01:15 in the Harvard Student Handbook,
01:01:17 which is distributed to each freshman
01:01:18 under the heading Standards of Conduct
01:01:20 in the Harvard community,
01:01:21 it says the college expects all students
01:01:23 to be honest and forthcoming
01:01:24 in their dealings with members in this community.
01:01:27 Students are required to respect
01:01:28 public and private ownership
01:01:30 and instances of theft,
01:01:31 misappropriation...
01:01:32 Anne.
01:01:33 Yes, sir?
01:01:34 Punch me in the face.
01:01:35 Go ahead.
01:01:38 Or unauthorized use
01:01:40 will result in disciplinary action,
01:01:42 including a requirement
01:01:43 to withdraw from the college.
01:01:44 You memorized that instead of doing what?
01:01:47 What my brother and I came here today to ask of you,
01:01:50 respectfully, of course,
01:01:51 is it's against university rules
01:01:52 to steal from another student, plain and simple.
01:01:54 And you've spoken to your housemaster?
01:01:55 Yes, sir,
01:01:56 and the housemaster made a recommendation
01:01:57 to the ad board,
01:01:58 but the ad board won't see it.
01:01:59 Have you tried dealing
01:02:00 with the other student directly?
01:02:01 Mr. Zuckerberg hasn't been responding
01:02:02 to any of our e-mails or phone calls
01:02:04 for the last two weeks.
01:02:05 He doesn't answer when we knock on his door at Kirkland,
01:02:07 and the closest I've come
01:02:08 to dealing with him face to face
01:02:09 is when I saw him on the quad
01:02:10 and chased him through Harvard Square.
01:02:11 You chased him?
01:02:12 I saw him,
01:02:13 and I know he saw me.
01:02:14 I went after him, and then he disappeared.
01:02:16 I don't see this as a university issue.
01:02:18 Of course this is a university issue.
01:02:20 There's a code of ethics and an honor code,
01:02:21 and he violated both.
01:02:22 You enter into a code of ethics with the university,
01:02:24 not with each other.
01:02:26 I'm sorry, President Summers,
01:02:27 but what you just said makes no sense to me at all.
01:02:30 I'm devastated by that.
01:02:31 What my brother means is
01:02:32 if Mark Zuckerberg walked into our dorm room
01:02:33 and stole our computer,
01:02:34 that would be a university issue.
01:02:36 I really don't know.
01:02:37 This office doesn't handle petty larceny.
01:02:38 This isn't petty larceny.
01:02:39 This idea is potentially worth millions of dollars.
01:02:42 Millions?
01:02:43 Yes.
01:02:44 He might just be letting
01:02:45 his imagination run away with you.
01:02:46 Sir, I honestly don't think
01:02:47 you're in any position to make that call.
01:02:49 I was the U.S. Treasury Secretary.
01:02:51 I'm in some position to make that call.
01:02:53 Letting our imaginations run away with us
01:02:55 is exactly what we were told to do
01:02:56 in your freshman address.
01:02:57 Well, then I would suggest
01:02:58 that you let your imaginations
01:02:59 run away with you on a new project.
01:03:01 You would?
01:03:02 Yes.
01:03:03 Everyone at Harvard's inventing something.
01:03:04 Harvard undergraduates believe
01:03:06 that inventing a job is better than finding a job.
01:03:09 So I'll suggest again
01:03:10 that the two of you come up with a new, new project.
01:03:13 I'm sorry, sir, but that's not the point.
01:03:14 Please, arrive at the point.
01:03:15 You don't have to be an intellectual property expert
01:03:17 to understand the difference between right and wrong.
01:03:19 You're saying that I don't.
01:03:20 Of course I'm not saying that, sir.
01:03:22 I'm saying that.
01:03:23 Really?
01:03:24 Sir.
01:03:25 And how did they get this appointment?
01:03:27 Colleagues of your father.
01:03:30 Let me tell you something, Mr. Winklevoss.
01:03:32 Mr. Winklevoss, since you're on the subject of right and wrong,
01:03:35 this action, this meeting,
01:03:37 the two of you being here, is wrong.
01:03:40 It's not worthy of Harvard.
01:03:41 It's not what Harvard saw in you.
01:03:43 You don't get special treatment.
01:03:45 We never asked--
01:03:46 Just start another project?
01:03:48 Like we're making a diorama for a science fair?
01:03:50 If you have a problem with that, Mr. Winklevoss--
01:03:52 We never asked for special treatment.
01:03:53 The courts are always at your disposal.
01:03:55 Is there anything else I can do for you?
01:03:57 You can take the harvester, man.
01:03:58 Look at you.
01:03:59 Thank you very much for your time, sir.
01:04:01 Whoops.
01:04:08 Broke a 335-year-old doorknob.
01:04:12 Eduardo, spring break, you and Mr. Zuckerberg
01:04:14 took a trip to New York.
01:04:15 Yes.
01:04:16 What was the purpose of the trip?
01:04:18 Well, as CFO, I had set up some meetings
01:04:21 with potential advertisers.
01:04:23 Who paid for the trip?
01:04:24 It was paid for at a $1,000 account
01:04:26 I had set up a few months earlier.
01:04:27 At this point, your $1,000 was the only money
01:04:30 that had been put into the company?
01:04:31 Yes.
01:04:32 How did you feel the meetings went?
01:04:34 They went terribly.
01:04:35 Why?
01:04:36 Mark was asleep.
01:04:38 I was not asleep.
01:04:39 Can I rephrase my answer?
01:04:41 I wish he'd been asleep.
01:04:43 So we're at 29 schools now,
01:04:48 with over 75,000 members.
01:04:50 People who go on the Facebook tend to stay on
01:04:52 longer than almost any other website.
01:04:54 Now, here's the most impressive statistic.
01:04:56 91% of people who try it once will come back.
01:04:59 Now, if you'll allow me--
01:05:00 Excuse me one second.
01:05:01 What sound is he making?
01:05:02 Is that like a tisk?
01:05:03 It wasn't a tisk.
01:05:08 It was...
01:05:10 like a glottal stop.
01:05:12 Almost a gag reflex.
01:05:15 Guess what is this?
01:05:18 There was one more meeting scheduled for the New York trip.
01:05:21 Yes, it was a dinner.
01:05:22 It was set up through my girlfriend at the time.
01:05:24 Would you say that Mark was excited about this meeting?
01:05:27 Yes.
01:05:28 Very.
01:05:29 They're not gonna card us.
01:05:31 You might.
01:05:32 It'll be embarrassing.
01:05:33 Tell him they're not gonna card us.
01:05:35 They're not gonna card us.
01:05:36 Mark, are you gonna talk about ads again?
01:05:38 Unless you're the ballet theater of Hartford,
01:05:40 the purpose of a business is to make a profit.
01:05:42 It isn't a business yet.
01:05:43 That's--that's tough for me, 'cause my job--
01:05:46 Never mind.
01:05:48 He's 25 minutes late.
01:05:52 He founded Napster when he was 19.
01:05:54 He could be late.
01:05:55 He's not a god.
01:05:56 Then what is he?
01:05:57 He's 25 minutes late.
01:05:58 I think we're just jealous.
01:05:59 I honestly wasn't jealous.
01:06:01 I was nervous.
01:06:02 Why?
01:06:03 Well, I didn't know him at all,
01:06:05 but I had done a search, and I'd asked around,
01:06:07 and he struck me as kind of a...
01:06:12 a wild card.
01:06:14 Why?
01:06:15 He crashed out of two pretty big Internet companies
01:06:17 in spectacular fashion.
01:06:19 He's had a reputation with drugs.
01:06:20 He also founded the company.
01:06:22 We don't need him.
01:06:24 He's here.
01:06:26 Found him.
01:06:29 And he does own a watch.
01:06:31 Stop.
01:06:32 Hey.
01:06:34 I'm Sean Parker.
01:06:35 How do you do?
01:06:36 You must be Eduardo and Christy and Mark.
01:06:38 Great to meet you.
01:06:39 Great to meet you.
01:06:40 You guys don't have anything in front of you.
01:06:42 No.
01:06:43 Tori.
01:06:44 You're awake.
01:06:45 Hey, baby boy.
01:06:46 Can you bring out some things?
01:06:47 The lacquered pork with that ginger comfy,
01:06:49 tuna tartare, and the lobster claws.
01:06:51 That'll get us started.
01:06:52 Christy, what do you like to drink?
01:06:55 An appletini.
01:06:56 Great.
01:06:57 Four of those.
01:06:59 From that point on, it was a Sean-a-thon.
01:07:03 [music playing]
01:07:05 The question was, what did you talk about?
01:07:13 He took us through his episode with Napster.
01:07:27 I didn't want to spend my 20s as a professional defender.
01:07:30 Who knew the music industry doesn't have a sense of humor?
01:07:33 We tried to sell the company to pay the $35 million
01:07:35 they said we owed in royalties.
01:07:37 But I guess to them, that was a little like selling
01:07:40 a stolen car to pay for the stolen gas.
01:07:42 So we said, screw it.
01:07:43 Declare bankruptcy.
01:07:44 And you made a name for yourself.
01:07:46 And you are dry.
01:07:47 Tori.
01:07:48 No, I'm good.
01:07:49 And then he went on to his second business venture,
01:07:51 which was an online Rolodex that he got
01:07:53 thrown out of by Case Equity.
01:07:55 And I wanted to do it nice this time.
01:07:57 I put on a tie, and I shined my shoes.
01:07:59 But nobody wants to take orders from a kid.
01:08:01 So let me tell you what happens to a 20-year-old
01:08:03 at the top of a hot dot com.
01:08:04 I'm not a psychiatrist, but--
01:08:06 I'm glad we got that on the record.
01:08:07 You're not a psychiatrist, but what?
01:08:09 A psychiatrist would say that he was paranoid.
01:08:12 They'll hire private detectives who
01:08:14 will follow you day and night.
01:08:15 You're a target for high-priced escorts.
01:08:17 I can't prove it, but I know they tap my phones.
01:08:19 Whatever it is that's going to trip you up,
01:08:21 you've done already.
01:08:22 Private behavior is a relic of a time gone by.
01:08:25 And if somehow, someway, you've managed
01:08:26 to live your life like the Dalai Lama,
01:08:28 they'll make shit up.
01:08:29 Because they don't want you.
01:08:31 They want your idea.
01:08:32 And they want you to say thank you while you--
01:08:34 excuse me-- wipe your chin and walk away.
01:08:37 That's what happened to you?
01:08:38 And delusional.
01:08:40 Yes.
01:08:41 But they'll be paid back in case.
01:08:43 I brought down the record companies with Napster,
01:08:45 and Case will suffer for their sins, too.
01:08:47 Sorry, you didn't bring down the record companies.
01:08:49 They won.
01:08:50 In court, yeah.
01:08:52 You want to buy our tower records, Eduardo?
01:08:57 And he told story after story about life in Silicon Valley,
01:09:01 parties at Stanford, down in LA,
01:09:03 friends who become millionaires,
01:09:05 but mostly how Mark had to--
01:09:07 he had to come to California.
01:09:10 And then he cut around to the Facebook.
01:09:13 So, tell me about your progress.
01:09:15 Well, we're in 29 schools now.
01:09:18 We got over 75,000 members.
01:09:19 Tell me about the strategy you used.
01:09:21 OK, for instance, we wanted Baylor in Texas,
01:09:23 but Baylor already had a social network on campus,
01:09:25 so instead of going right after them,
01:09:27 we made a list of every school within 100 miles.
01:09:29 But the Facebook unless campus is first.
01:09:31 Pretty snob Baylor kids were seeing their friends on our site.
01:09:33 We were in.
01:09:34 It's called the little bitcoin. That's smart, Mark.
01:09:35 Oh, thanks. That was my--
01:09:36 Easy.
01:09:37 Hey, you know what? Settle an argument for us.
01:09:38 I say it's time to start making money from the Facebook,
01:09:40 but Mark doesn't want to advertise you.
01:09:42 Who's right?
01:09:43 Well, neither of you yet.
01:09:45 The Facebook is cool. That's what it's got going for it.
01:09:48 Yeah.
01:09:49 You don't want to ruin it with ads because ads aren't cool.
01:09:51 Exactly.
01:09:52 It's like you're throwing the greatest party on campus
01:09:53 and someone saying it's got to be over by 11.
01:09:55 That's exactly right.
01:09:56 You don't even know what the thing is yet,
01:09:58 how big it can get, how far it can go.
01:10:00 This is no time to take your chips down.
01:10:02 A million dollars isn't cool. You know what's cool?
01:10:04 You?
01:10:05 A billion dollars.
01:10:10 That shut everybody up.
01:10:14 And that's where you're headed.
01:10:16 A billion-dollar valuation.
01:10:18 Unless you take bad advice,
01:10:20 in which case you may as well have come up with a chain
01:10:22 of very successful yogurt shops.
01:10:24 When you go fishing, you can catch a lot of fish,
01:10:26 or you can catch a big fish.
01:10:28 You ever walk into a guy's den and see a picture of him
01:10:30 standing next to 14 trout?
01:10:31 No, he's holding a 3,000-pound marlin.
01:10:33 Yep, that's a good analogy.
01:10:34 Okay, but we all know that marlins don't really weigh
01:10:36 3,000 pounds, right?
01:10:37 Have you seen the big ones up close?
01:10:38 No, I haven't, but I don't think the guy is holding
01:10:40 a marlin the size of a Range Rover.
01:10:41 That would be a really big fish and a very strong guy.
01:10:43 You think we might be getting away from the point?
01:10:45 I don't have a dog in this fight.
01:10:47 I'm just a fan who came to say hi.
01:10:49 He owned Mark after that dinner.
01:10:52 He picked up the check, he told Mark they'd talk again soon,
01:10:54 and he was gone.
01:10:56 But not before he made his biggest contribution
01:10:58 to the company.
01:11:00 Drop the "the." Just Facebook.
01:11:05 It's cleaner.
01:11:07 Shit.
01:11:11 Yeah.
01:11:17 [truck rumbling]
01:11:19 There's got to be some kind of land speed record for talking.
01:11:24 You want to end the party at 11?
01:11:26 I'm trying to pay for the party.
01:11:28 There won't be a party unless it's cool.
01:11:31 So what do you think?
01:11:33 Yeah, sure, let's drop the "the."
01:11:35 I meant to catching the marlin instead of the 14 trout.
01:11:38 Doesn't that sound good?
01:11:39 If you're a trout.
01:11:41 I'm going to enter this into the record.
01:11:43 "The ownership of the papers for Facebook and LLC
01:11:45 "registered in Florida."
01:11:46 Why Florida?
01:11:48 It's where my family lives.
01:11:50 "And ask the respondent to stipulate that the articles
01:11:52 "of incorporation state the ownership as follows.
01:11:54 "65% for Mark Zuckerberg, 30% for Eduardo Saverin,
01:11:57 "and 5% for Dustin Moskowitz."
01:11:59 Now we stipulate.
01:12:01 And that was April 13, 2004.
01:12:03 You can mark it.
01:12:05 Do you have anything here?
01:12:07 Yes, thank you.
01:12:09 Mr. Saverin, have you ever done anything
01:12:12 No.
01:12:14 You never did anything to embarrass the company
01:12:16 or even seriously jeopardize it?
01:12:18 No.
01:12:20 No?
01:12:22 No.
01:12:26 You were accused of animal cruelty.
01:12:28 Wait.
01:12:30 You weren't?
01:12:32 This is not happening.
01:12:34 I have here an article from the Crimson.
01:12:36 Jesus Christ.
01:12:38 I can't have this, Walter.
01:12:40 This is another club playing a prank.
01:12:42 I'd gotten into the Phoenix.
01:12:44 I'd been accepted,
01:12:46 and as part of my initiation,
01:12:48 I had to, for one week, carry with me at all times
01:12:50 and take care of a chicken.
01:12:52 They identify you as one of the founders of Facebook,
01:12:54 Junior Eduardo Saverin.
01:12:56 I'm not the expert, but being connected to torturing animals
01:12:58 is probably bad for business.
01:13:00 I did not torture the chicken.
01:13:02 I don't torture chickens.
01:13:04 Are you crazy?
01:13:06 No, and settle down, please.
01:13:08 I'm calling from the Crimson.
01:13:10 It's escaping.
01:13:12 I was having dinner in the Kirkland dining hall with Mark,
01:13:14 and I had the chicken with me
01:13:16 because I had to have the chicken with me at all times.
01:13:18 This was college.
01:13:20 Somebody's gonna have to answer for this.
01:13:22 And the dining hall was serving chicken for dinner,
01:13:24 and I had to feed my chicken,
01:13:26 so I took little pieces of chicken
01:13:28 and I gave it to the chicken.
01:13:30 Someone must have seen me because the next thing I knew,
01:13:32 I was being accused of forced cannibalism.
01:13:34 I didn't know you couldn't do that.
01:13:36 I dealt with the various animal rights groups.
01:13:38 I dealt with the associate dean of the college.
01:13:40 This was all resolved.
01:13:42 988.
01:13:44 Someone from the pork or the fly must have reported it.
01:13:46 For all I know, it was the Winklevosses.
01:13:48 All right, let's just forget about it.
01:13:50 This is absurd.
01:13:52 I'm being accused of animal cruelty.
01:13:54 It's better to be accused of necrophilia.
01:13:56 It is better to be accused of necrophilia.
01:13:58 I'm gonna have to explain this to my father.
01:14:00 I'm gonna have to explain this to everybody.
01:14:02 What is happening on that?
01:14:04 I haven't been to class.
01:14:06 I'm supposed to write about these four paintings.
01:14:08 That's a Facebook page.
01:14:10 Yeah, I opened it under an alias,
01:14:12 I posted the paintings, and asked people to comment.
01:14:14 Every once in a while, I hop on and stir the pot
01:14:16 to get a good debate going.
01:14:18 Mr. Zuckerberg was cheating on his final exam?
01:14:20 I'd rather not answer that, Gretchen.
01:14:22 And why not?
01:14:24 'Cause I'm not suing him for cheating on his final exam.
01:14:26 That's not what friends do.
01:14:28 Well, you just told us he was cheating.
01:14:30 Oops.
01:14:32 No, he didn't tell us about it at all.
01:14:34 Our litigators are capable of finding a crimson article.
01:14:36 In fact, when we raised the subject with him,
01:14:38 he defended you.
01:14:40 Oops.
01:14:42 993.
01:14:44 We are so close.
01:14:46 Oh, yeah, that reminds me.
01:14:48 We're gonna need more money, Marto.
01:14:50 Yeah, no, I agree. More servers, more help.
01:14:52 I'm interviewing two interns to come to Palo Alto,
01:14:54 and we're gonna have to pay them something.
01:14:56 Sorry, what?
01:14:58 I already found a house for rent on a street two blocks from the Stanford campus.
01:15:00 I'm gonna go to California for the summer.
01:15:02 You mean, when did I actually decide?
01:15:04 Somewhere in the middle of the Sean Parker variety hour.
01:15:06 He was right. California's the place we've gotta be.
01:15:08 It's your Jed Clavitt.
01:15:10 You guys got the Beverly Hillbillies in Brazil?
01:15:12 Yeah, we're gonna show Brazil his genes.
01:15:14 What is your problem with Sean?
01:15:16 He doesn't bring anything to the table.
01:15:18 He doesn't have money. Dustin's a better programmer.
01:15:20 He's got connections to VCs.
01:15:22 We don't need VCs. We need advertisers.
01:15:24 And I have connections to VCs.
01:15:26 They're real players. And as someone who's just really embarrassed the company in a bad way...
01:15:28 It was the Winklevosses, Mark.
01:15:30 Hang on. Hit refresh.
01:15:32 One hundred fifty thousand...
01:15:34 One hundred and fifty thousand members, Mardo.
01:15:36 Congratulations.
01:15:38 Congratulations.
01:15:40 You don't think it was strange that he was followed by private detectives...
01:15:42 Who came up with nothing.
01:15:44 ...enough to get him out of the company?
01:15:46 The drugs, the girls.
01:15:48 We don't know that any of that's true.
01:15:50 Read about it.
01:15:52 I can read about you torturing birds since Wendell's reading about something that...
01:15:54 Eat all fish! Eat other fish! The marlins and the trout!
01:15:56 What's he talking about?
01:15:58 I'm interviewing interns that tend tomorrow night in the CS lab.
01:16:00 Get on board with this man.
01:16:02 You know, I don't really know what else to say.
01:16:04 I don't really know what else to say.
01:16:06 [chickens clucking]
01:16:08 [crowd cheering]
01:16:10 [crowd cheering]
01:16:12 [crowd cheering]
01:16:14 [crowd cheering]
01:16:26 [bell ringing]
01:16:34 Hey!
01:16:36 [crowd cheering]
01:16:38 Yo, Mark!
01:16:40 What's going on?
01:16:42 We have ten minutes to get root access to a Python web server...
01:16:44 ...expose its SSL encryption, and then intercept all traffic over its secure ports.
01:16:46 They're hacking!
01:16:48 Yes, all behind a fixed firewall emulator, but here's the beauty.
01:16:50 You know I didn't understand anything you just said, right?
01:16:52 I do know that.
01:16:54 So what's the beauty?
01:16:56 Every tenth line of code written, they have to drink a shot.
01:16:58 And hacking's supposed to be stealth, so every time the server detects an intrusion...
01:17:00 ...the candidate responsible has to drink a shot.
01:17:02 As of a program running that has a pop-up window appear simultaneously on all five computers...
01:17:04 ...the last candidate to hit the window has to drink a shot.
01:17:06 Plus, every three minutes, they all have to drink a shot.
01:17:08 Three minutes!
01:17:10 [bell ringing]
01:17:12 Hey, can I ask, what part of the intern's job do they need to be able to do drunk?
01:17:14 You're right.
01:17:16 A more relevant test might be seeing if they can keep a chicken alive for a week.
01:17:18 That was me.
01:17:22 Here.
01:17:24 What is this?
01:17:26 I opened a new account and put $18,000 in it.
01:17:28 Did I gain through the summer?
01:17:30 [crowd cheering]
01:17:32 [crowd cheering]
01:17:34 [crowd cheering]
01:17:36 [crowd cheering]
01:17:38 Welcome to Facebook.
01:17:40 [crowd cheering]
01:17:42 [crowd cheering]
01:17:44 [crowd cheering]
01:17:46 [crowd cheering]
01:17:48 [crowd cheering]
01:17:50 $18,000?
01:17:52 Yes.
01:17:54 In addition to the $1,000 you'd already put up.
01:17:56 Yes.
01:17:58 A total of $19,000 now.
01:18:00 Yes.
01:18:02 Hang on.
01:18:04 I'm sorry.
01:18:06 May I continue?
01:18:08 After expressing misgivings about Mr. Zuckerberg taking the company and moving it to California for the summer,
01:18:10 why did you put $18,000 in an account for his use?
01:18:12 I figured we were partners.
01:18:14 I wanted to be a team player.
01:18:16 I figured Mark, Dustin, and the new interns could work on the site
01:18:18 while I was generating advertiser interest in New York.
01:18:20 But mostly, I figured,
01:18:22 how much could possibly go wrong in three months?
01:18:24 [music]
01:18:26 California night!
01:18:28 California night!
01:18:30 California night!
01:18:32 [screaming]
01:18:34 [splash]
01:18:36 I didn't die.
01:18:38 I know.
01:18:40 I made it.
01:18:42 Okay. Ready?
01:18:44 That was like an eight.
01:18:46 That was like a two.
01:18:48 It was better than that.
01:18:50 [screaming]
01:18:52 [splash]
01:18:54 [groaning]
01:18:56 I'm okay.
01:18:58 You sure?
01:19:00 [doorbell]
01:19:02 That's the doorbell.
01:19:04 I didn't know we had a doorbell.
01:19:06 Andrew, get the door!
01:19:08 No, he's wired in.
01:19:10 That's been a cut into your security closet.
01:19:12 Andrew.
01:19:14 Your voice.
01:19:16 [music]
01:19:18 Sean?
01:19:20 Mark. Do you live here?
01:19:22 Yeah.
01:19:24 We were right across the street. We saw the chimney.
01:19:26 Yeah.
01:19:28 I'm Sharon.
01:19:30 This is my Sharon. She lives across the street.
01:19:32 I was helping move out. We saw the chimney.
01:19:34 We had a zip line to the pool.
01:19:36 You came to California.
01:19:38 Yeah.
01:19:40 You made the right choice.
01:19:42 [music]
01:19:44 Here you go.
01:19:50 [music]
01:19:52 [doorbell]
01:19:54 Sharon?
01:19:56 [glass shattering]
01:19:58 I'm so sorry. No problem. I didn't know you were gonna...
01:20:00 Here you go. I don't know. Wait!
01:20:02 [glass shattering]
01:20:04 This house and this team are great.
01:20:06 It's exactly what it should be.
01:20:08 I'm Sean Parker.
01:20:10 Oh, he's wired in.
01:20:12 That's what I'm talking about.
01:20:14 Where's Eduardo?
01:20:16 He got an internship in New York.
01:20:18 Eduardo didn't come out.
01:20:20 [music]
01:20:22 [music]
01:20:24 (upbeat music)
01:20:26 (upbeat music)
01:20:29 - I was crashing there for a little bit
01:20:43 while I'm taking care of some things,
01:20:44 but she's done for the summer,
01:20:46 so she's back at her parents' place.
01:20:48 - The homeless rock star, Paula Altho.
01:20:50 - All right.
01:20:51 What's your plan for the summer?
01:20:55 (upbeat music)
01:20:57 - I asked what your plan for the summer.
01:21:03 - We're gonna go to the restroom.
01:21:04 - Okay.
01:21:05 (upbeat music)
01:21:07 - Your date looks so familiar to me.
01:21:12 - She looks familiar to a lot of people.
01:21:14 - What do you mean?
01:21:15 (upbeat music)
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01:26:00 (crowd chattering)
01:26:07 - Ah, Mr. Winklevoss.
01:26:14 - Hi.
01:26:15 - Tremendous race.
01:26:16 - Thank you.
01:26:17 Oh, and this is my brother, Cameron.
01:26:18 - Excellent.
01:26:19 Sir?
01:26:20 - His Royal Highness Prince Albert.
01:26:22 Your Highness, this is Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.
01:26:24 - Of course.
01:26:24 Brilliant race.
01:26:25 I've never seen a race that close.
01:26:27 - Yes, Your Highness.
01:26:28 - My grandfather, Jack Kelly,
01:26:29 was one of the premier rowers of his day.
01:26:31 I've been coming to Henley for 30 years,
01:26:33 and I've never seen a race that close.
01:26:35 Have you?
01:26:36 Have you seen a race that close?
01:26:37 - No, Your Highness.
01:26:38 Mile and a half races are more commonly won
01:26:40 by a boat than through two.
01:26:40 - Yes, that's absolutely right.
01:26:42 Brutally close.
01:26:43 - May I introduce my teammates?
01:26:44 This is--
01:26:45 - I'm sorry.
01:26:46 You'll have to excuse us.
01:26:47 - On to the deck.
01:26:48 (crowd chattering)
01:26:51 - So you flew all the way out here to see that?
01:26:53 - Wouldn't have missed it, brother.
01:26:54 - How was the royalty?
01:26:55 - Oh, I just wanted him to tell me a couple more times
01:26:57 how close the race was.
01:26:58 Just brutal, brutally, brutally excruciating.
01:27:01 - Dad, the guy's a prince of the country.
01:27:03 His size and hand tug are relaxed.
01:27:04 It's fine.
01:27:05 - Joyce, Dr. DeVita, Mr. Winklevoss.
01:27:07 How's the tough beat?
01:27:08 - I'm sorry that you and Mom had to fly
01:27:09 all the way out here to see that.
01:27:10 - No, don't ever apologize to me
01:27:11 for losing a race like that.
01:27:12 Don't ever apologize to anyone
01:27:14 for losing a race like that.
01:27:15 - Boys?
01:27:16 - Mr. Kenwright.
01:27:18 Dad, this is Mr. Kenwright,
01:27:19 head of the host family for this week.
01:27:20 - Ah, pleasure to meet you.
01:27:21 - Good to meet you.
01:27:22 - I just had a phone chat with my daughter.
01:27:24 She told me that she and her friends
01:27:26 were already talking about the race,
01:27:27 which they've just seen via their computers.
01:27:29 New website called Facebook.
01:27:31 - Do you have this in America?
01:27:33 - I'm gonna find your mother.
01:27:36 - Did I say something wrong?
01:27:40 - Your daughter doesn't go to school in the States.
01:27:41 - No, no, Cambridge.
01:27:43 Majoring in French literature.
01:27:44 I wasn't aware there was such a thing.
01:27:45 - They have Facebook in Cambridge.
01:27:47 - And apparently Oxford and the London School of Economics.
01:27:49 That's where her friends go.
01:27:51 - That's awesome.
01:27:52 Good race, boys.
01:27:53 Take a bitter with the better, eh?
01:27:56 - I'm gonna go watch the rest of them.
01:28:00 This is online, I want to see it.
01:28:05 - Stop it.
01:28:06 Stop it, Cameron.
01:28:08 Knock it off.
01:28:10 I don't mind that we lost to the Dutch today
01:28:13 by less than a second.
01:28:14 That was a good race, and that was a fair race.
01:28:16 And they'll see us again.
01:28:18 What I mind, and what you should mind,
01:28:20 is showing up on Monday for a race that was run on Sunday.
01:28:24 We tried talking to ourselves, we tried writing a letter,
01:28:26 we tried the ad board, and we tried talking
01:28:27 to the president of the university.
01:28:29 Now I am asking you, for the last time,
01:28:32 let's take the considerable resources at our disposal
01:28:34 and sue him in federal court.
01:28:38 Come on.
01:28:38 - I need a real drink.
01:28:49 - Screw it.
01:28:50 Let's gut the fricking nerd.
01:28:53 That's what I'm talking about.
01:28:58 (girls laughing)
01:29:00 - Check it out, I saw him today.
01:29:02 Manningham, Mitchell Manningham, my case equity guy.
01:29:05 Hang on.
01:29:06 Are you guys using spikes or ghost misses?
01:29:08 - We don't know, we're just shooting at each other.
01:29:10 - You sweet kamikazes.
01:29:11 I saw him getting into his turbo Carrera,
01:29:16 and he saw me too.
01:29:18 I know he did.
01:29:19 (upbeat music)
01:29:22 - Don't sweat it, I'm on a long line.
01:29:24 - Does anybody hear that banging?
01:29:28 - You don't hear anything, you're writing code.
01:29:31 - Dude, somebody's at the door.
01:29:33 - It's not a dish best served cold,
01:29:35 it's best served immediately and relentlessly.
01:29:38 I'm gonna call you back.
01:29:43 - What's up?
01:29:46 - What's up?
01:29:47 (girls laughing)
01:29:50 - Mark was supposed to pick me up at the airport an hour ago.
01:29:51 I've been calling his cell.
01:29:53 He was on a 36 hour coding tear,
01:29:54 so he took a nap for a couple of hours.
01:29:56 (girls coughing)
01:29:59 - What happened here?
01:30:05 - Not happened, happening.
01:30:07 Next big thing.
01:30:08 - What's up?
01:30:10 - Hey man, back to work.
01:30:12 - Okay.
01:30:13 - The more bad I eat of this, the more wasted I get.
01:30:16 I mean, the more wasted it--
01:30:18 - We understand.
01:30:19 - How old are they, Sean?
01:30:23 - That's not polite to ask.
01:30:24 - Sean, how old are they?
01:30:25 - You think you know me, right?
01:30:28 - I've read enough.
01:30:30 - You know how much I've read about you?
01:30:31 - Marto.
01:30:39 - Hey man, I waited an hour for you at the airport.
01:30:42 - What time is it?
01:30:43 - Midnight or 3 a.m. in New York where I just came from.
01:30:45 - Wow.
01:30:47 You gotta see some of the new stuff we got.
01:30:48 Hey Dustin, show him the wall.
01:30:50 I'm just calling it the wall.
01:30:51 - Forget the wall, tell him about the meeting
01:30:52 I've got set up.
01:30:54 You know Peter Thiel?
01:30:55 Nope, no reason you should.
01:30:57 He just runs a two billion dollar hedge fund
01:30:59 called Clarium Capital.
01:31:00 - Why is he setting up meetings?
01:31:03 Thiel might wanna make an angel investment.
01:31:04 - I don't care if he's an actual angel.
01:31:05 Why is he setting up business meetings?
01:31:07 - You've had a long flight.
01:31:08 - No, I had a long wait on the car,
01:31:09 met a JFK, then a long wait at the passenger loading
01:31:11 and unloading zone at SFO,
01:31:13 and in between there was a long flight.
01:31:15 I'm the business end of this company.
01:31:17 He is a house guest living here rent free
01:31:20 on a very generous grant
01:31:21 from the Eduardo Saverin Foundation.
01:31:23 - I heard about your big ticket ad buys,
01:31:25 Gary's Tuxedos.
01:31:26 - Hey man.
01:31:27 - Harvard bartending course.
01:31:28 You're just a small step away from bagging Snooki's cookies.
01:31:30 I can feel it.
01:31:31 - Wanna talk to me a little for a minute?
01:31:41 - Sure.
01:31:42 (laughing)
01:31:45 - Uh, Bong here.
01:31:48 - Oh, hi.
01:31:50 - Megan.
01:31:50 - How's it going?
01:31:52 How's the internship?
01:31:54 How's Christy?
01:31:55 - How's the internship?
01:31:58 - Yeah.
01:31:59 - Mark, Jesus, I quit the internship.
01:32:03 We talked about this on the phone.
01:32:04 I quit my first day.
01:32:05 - I do remember you saying that.
01:32:08 - Silence, Christy.
01:32:12 Christy's crazy.
01:32:13 - Is that fun?
01:32:14 - No, she's actually psychotic.
01:32:16 She's insanely jealous, she's irrational,
01:32:20 and I'm frightened of her.
01:32:22 - Still, it's nice to have a girlfriend.
01:32:24 - I did not want that guy
01:32:28 representing himself as part of this company.
01:32:31 - You gotta move out here, Martyr.
01:32:33 This is where it's all happening.
01:32:34 - Do you hear what I just said?
01:32:34 - The connections, the energy.
01:32:36 - Mark, Mark, you gotta--
01:32:37 - I'm afraid if you don't come out here,
01:32:38 you're gonna get left behind.
01:32:39 I want, I need you out here.
01:32:42 Please don't tell my assistant.
01:32:43 - What did you just say?
01:32:44 - It's moving faster than any of us ever imagined it would.
01:32:46 It's moving fast.
01:32:47 It's moving fast, and Sean thinks that we--
01:32:49 - Sean is not part of this company.
01:32:50 - We have over 300,000 members,
01:32:51 while we're in 160 schools-- - I'm aware of that.
01:32:52 - Including five in Europe.
01:32:53 - I'm aware of that.
01:32:54 - We need more servers-- - Mark, I am the CFO!
01:32:56 - We need more programmers, and we need more money,
01:32:58 and he set up the Teal meeting.
01:32:59 He set up meetings all over town.
01:33:01 - He set up other meetings?
01:33:02 - Yes.
01:33:02 - Without me knowing anything about--
01:33:03 - They're in New York!
01:33:04 They're in New York riding subways 14 hours a day,
01:33:07 trying to find advertisers!
01:33:08 - Yeah, and how's it going so far?
01:33:09 - What did you mean, get left behind?
01:33:16 - Can I help you?
01:33:22 - I'd like to freeze this bank account,
01:33:24 and cancel all existing checks and lines of credit.
01:33:27 - May I see some ID, please?
01:33:30 - Yeah, sure, sure.
01:33:31 (dramatic music)
01:33:34 - Sean, he'll be right with you.
01:33:40 - No problem.
01:33:41 - You know this is where they film "Towering Inferno"?
01:33:46 - That's comforting.
01:33:47 - Hey, guys, come on back.
01:33:51 She offer you some water?
01:33:53 - Oh, yeah, we're cool.
01:33:54 - Wait, come on in.
01:33:57 Must be Mark.
01:33:58 - Hi.
01:34:00 - We took a look at everything, and congratulations.
01:34:04 We're gonna start you off with a $500,000 investment.
01:34:08 Maurice is gonna talk to you
01:34:09 about some corporate restructuring.
01:34:11 - We're fine as a corporation in Delaware.
01:34:13 Come up with a stock structure
01:34:14 that allows for new investors.
01:34:16 - Now, let me ask you something.
01:34:18 Who is Eduardo Saverin?
01:34:20 (dramatic music)
01:34:23 - Jesus Christ.
01:34:40 - When did you get back?
01:34:45 - You scared me.
01:34:46 I need you to knock.
01:34:47 - When did you get back?
01:34:48 - I'm not gonna knock.
01:34:49 I need you to knock.
01:34:50 - When did you get back?
01:34:52 - I got back this afternoon.
01:34:54 - And when were you gonna call me?
01:34:56 - Chris, it was kind of a rough trip, and I was tired.
01:34:59 - Yeah, or answer one of my 47 texts.
01:35:01 Did you know I sent 47 texts?
01:35:03 - I did, and I thought that was incredibly normal behavior.
01:35:07 - Are you mocking me?
01:35:08 - I brought you a present.
01:35:10 - Why does your status say single on your Facebook page?
01:35:14 - What?
01:35:16 - Why does your relationship status say single
01:35:19 on your Facebook page?
01:35:20 - Well, I was single when I set up the page.
01:35:21 - And you just never bothered to change it?
01:35:23 What?
01:35:25 - I don't know how.
01:35:26 - Do I look stupid to you?
01:35:28 - No, calm down.
01:35:29 - You're asking me to believe that the CFO of Facebook
01:35:32 doesn't know how to change his relationship status
01:35:34 on Facebook?
01:35:35 - It's a little embarrassing,
01:35:36 so you should take it as a sign of trust
01:35:37 that I would tell you that.
01:35:38 - Go to hell.
01:35:39 - Take it easy.
01:35:39 - No, you didn't change it
01:35:40 so you could screw those Silicon Valley sluts
01:35:42 every time you got to San Marcos.
01:35:43 - It's not even remotely true,
01:35:44 and I can promise you that the Silicon Valley sluts
01:35:47 don't care what anyone's relationship status is on Facebook.
01:35:50 Please, open your present.
01:35:51 - Your phone does work.
01:35:53 It's Mark.
01:35:55 - Okay, this is gonna be tricky.
01:35:57 Open your present.
01:35:58 It's a silk scarf.
01:35:59 - Have you ever seen me wear a scarf?
01:36:02 - This will be your first.
01:36:03 Yeah.
01:36:05 - You froze our account?
01:36:06 - I did.
01:36:07 - You froze the account?
01:36:08 - I had to get your attention, Mark.
01:36:09 - Do you realize that you jeopardized the entire company?
01:36:11 Do you realize that your actions
01:36:12 could have permanently destroyed
01:36:13 everything I've been working on?
01:36:13 - We have been working on it.
01:36:14 - Without money, the site can't function.
01:36:16 Okay, let me tell you the difference
01:36:17 between Facebook and everybody else.
01:36:19 We don't crash ever.
01:36:20 If the servers are down for even a day,
01:36:21 our entire reputation is irreversibly destroyed.
01:36:24 - Look, I found you.
01:36:24 - Users are critical.
01:36:25 Friendster has proved that.
01:36:26 Even a few people leaving would reverberate
01:36:27 through the entire user base.
01:36:28 The users are interconnected.
01:36:30 That is the whole point.
01:36:31 College kids are online because their friends are online,
01:36:33 and if one domino goes, the other dominoes go.
01:36:35 Don't you get that?
01:36:36 I am not going back to the Caribbean night at AEPI.
01:36:38 - Holy shit.
01:36:42 (dramatic music)
01:36:44 What is wrong with you?
01:36:45 - Did you like being nobody?
01:36:47 Did you like being a joke?
01:36:48 Do you wanna go back to that?
01:36:49 - Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on.
01:36:50 - That was the act of a child, not a businessman,
01:36:52 and it certainly was not the act of a friend.
01:36:54 How embarrassing it was for me to try to cash a check today.
01:36:56 I'm not going back to that life.
01:36:57 Maybe you were frustrated.
01:36:58 - Yeah.
01:37:00 - Maybe you were angry.
01:37:01 - I was.
01:37:01 - But I am willing to let bygones be bygones
01:37:05 because, Margo, I've got some good news.
01:37:07 - I'm sorry.
01:37:08 I was angry, and maybe it was childish,
01:37:12 but I had to get your attention.
01:37:13 - Wardo, I said I got some good news.
01:37:16 - What is it?
01:37:18 - Peter Thiel just made an angel investment
01:37:19 of half a million dollars.
01:37:20 - What?
01:37:22 - Half a million dollars,
01:37:23 and he's setting us up in an office.
01:37:25 They wanna reincorporate the company.
01:37:28 They wanna meet you.
01:37:29 They need your signature on some documents,
01:37:30 so you gotta get your ass on the first flight
01:37:32 back to San Francisco.
01:37:33 I need my CFO.
01:37:38 (sighs)
01:37:40 - I'm on my way.
01:37:41 - Wardo.
01:37:42 - Yeah?
01:37:43 - We did it.
01:37:43 - Wardo?
01:37:48 (Wardo yells)
01:37:49 You're going back there already?
01:37:51 - Yes.
01:37:52 And also, I'm breaking up with you.
01:37:56 (dramatic music)
01:37:59 - Four documents.
01:38:05 The first two are common stock purchase agreements
01:38:07 allowing you to buy stock in the newly reincorporated
01:38:10 Facebook as opposed to the old shares,
01:38:12 which are now worthless.
01:38:14 The third is an exchange agreement
01:38:15 allowing you to exchange the old shares for new shares,
01:38:18 and then finally a voter holding agreement.
01:38:20 - How many shares of stock will I own?
01:38:23 - 1,328,334.
01:38:27 That represents a 34.4% ownership share.
01:38:30 Why the increase from the original 30%?
01:38:33 - 'Cause you may need to dilute it
01:38:34 to award shares to new investors.
01:38:36 - I love working with business majors.
01:38:38 - I'm telling you.
01:38:39 - Economics.
01:38:40 - Right.
01:38:40 - You should know that Mark has already taken
01:38:42 his percentage from 60 down to 51.
01:38:44 - Oh.
01:38:45 Well, Mark doesn't care about money
01:38:47 and he needs to be protected.
01:38:49 - Desta Moskowitz owns 6.81%,
01:38:54 Sean Parker, 6.47%.
01:38:57 - Good with that.
01:39:00 - And Peter Thiel, 7%.
01:39:05 - Would you like to use my pen?
01:39:08 - Eduardo?
01:39:09 Eduardo?
01:39:12 - Can you please repeat the question?
01:39:15 - No, it was an outrageously leading question
01:39:16 the first time around,
01:39:17 and now you want us to hear it twice?
01:39:18 - Yes, would you read it back, please?
01:39:20 - Well, go ahead.
01:39:21 - Counsel, and when you signed these documents,
01:39:23 were you aware that you were signing
01:39:24 your own death certificate?
01:39:26 - No.
01:39:27 It was insanely stupid of me
01:39:33 not to have my own lawyers look over all of it.
01:39:36 In all honesty, I thought they were my lawyers.
01:39:38 - I was your only friend.
01:39:43 Yet one friend.
01:39:47 - My father wouldn't even look at me.
01:39:53 - Okay, Eduardo, did Mr. Zuckerberg say anything to you
01:39:56 after you signed the papers?
01:39:58 - There was a lot of handshaking,
01:39:59 a lot of congratulations.
01:40:02 He'd already told me that he wouldn't be coming back
01:40:04 to school for at least a semester,
01:40:06 so we were saying goodbye for a while.
01:40:09 And then before I left, he said--
01:40:12 - But you gotta come back.
01:40:13 Somewhere around the end of November, early December,
01:40:15 Peter wants to throw us an amazing party
01:40:17 when we hit a million members.
01:40:18 It's gonna be out of control.
01:40:19 You gotta come back for it.
01:40:20 - A million members?
01:40:21 - Yeah.
01:40:23 - Remember the algorithm on the window at Kirkland?
01:40:26 - Yeah.
01:40:32 Yeah, I'll be here.
01:40:33 - You sure about this?
01:40:39 You're 20 minutes late.
01:40:41 They're gonna walk in there and say you overslept
01:40:42 and didn't have time to get dressed.
01:40:43 They're gonna pitch you.
01:40:44 Case Equity's going to pitch you.
01:40:46 They're gonna beg you to take their money.
01:40:47 You're gonna nod, you're gonna nod, you're gonna nod,
01:40:49 and then they're gonna say,
01:40:50 which one of you is Roth?
01:40:52 No, not Roth, Manningham.
01:40:54 Which one of you is Mitchell Manningham?
01:40:55 And he'll say, "I am," and then you say,
01:40:57 "Sean Parker says fuck you."
01:41:00 Walk out.
01:41:01 - Okay.
01:41:02 - In late November, I got the email from Mark
01:41:17 telling me to come out for the millionth member party.
01:41:20 - What else did the email say?
01:41:21 - It said that we had to have a business meeting,
01:41:24 that Mark and Sean had played some kind of revenge stunt
01:41:27 on Case Equity, and that Manningham was so impressed
01:41:30 that he was now making an investment offer
01:41:32 that was hard to turn down.
01:41:33 So I went to California,
01:41:36 and I went straight to the new offices.
01:41:38 I didn't know whether to dress for the party
01:41:40 or for the business meeting, so I kind of dressed for both.
01:41:43 But it didn't matter.
01:41:47 - Why not?
01:41:47 - Because I wasn't called out there for either one.
01:41:49 - What were you called out there for?
01:41:51 - An ambush.
01:41:56 - Mr. Sabler, hey, come over here.
01:41:59 (people chattering)
01:42:02 - First I thought he was joking,
01:42:13 giving me more contracts to sign.
01:42:14 But then I started reading.
01:42:20 Wait, what is this?
01:42:25 - Well, as you know, we had some new investors
01:42:29 that have come-- - What is this?
01:42:30 - Mr. Sabler.
01:42:44 Mark!
01:42:48 Mark!
01:42:50 - He's wired in. - Sorry?
01:42:51 - He's wired in. - Is he?
01:42:52 - Yes.
01:42:53 - How about now, you're still wired in?
01:42:56 - No security.
01:42:57 - You issued 24 million new shares of stock.
01:42:59 - You were told that if new investors came along--
01:43:02 - How much were your shares diluted?
01:43:04 How much were his?
01:43:05 - What was Mr. Zuckerberg's ownership share diluted down to?
01:43:08 - It wasn't.
01:43:11 - What was Mr. Moskowitz's ownership share diluted down to?
01:43:14 - It wasn't.
01:43:15 - What was Sean Parker's ownership share diluted down to?
01:43:19 - It wasn't.
01:43:20 - What was Peter Thiel's ownership share diluted down to?
01:43:23 - It wasn't.
01:43:24 - And what was your ownership share diluted down to?
01:43:27 - .03%.
01:43:29 - You signed the papers.
01:43:40 You set me up.
01:43:41 You're gonna blame me
01:43:42 because you were the business head of the company
01:43:43 and you made a bad business deal with your own company?
01:43:45 - This is gonna be like I'm not a part of Facebook.
01:43:47 - It won't be like you're not a part of Facebook.
01:43:49 You're not a part of Facebook.
01:43:50 - My name's on the masthead.
01:43:51 - You might wanna check again.
01:43:52 - It's because I froze the account.
01:43:53 - You think we were gonna let you parade around
01:43:55 in your ridiculous suits
01:43:56 pretending you were running this company?
01:43:57 - Sorry, my prod is at the cleaners
01:44:00 along with my hoodie and my fuck you flip flops,
01:44:02 you pretentious douchebag.
01:44:04 - Security's here.
01:44:05 You'll be leaving now?
01:44:05 - I'm not signing those papers.
01:44:07 - We will get the signature.
01:44:09 - Tell me this isn't about me getting into the Phoenix.
01:44:11 - You, you did it.
01:44:15 I knew you did it.
01:44:16 You planted that story about the chicken.
01:44:18 - I didn't plant the story about the chicken.
01:44:19 - What's he talking about?
01:44:20 - About having me accused of animal cruelty.
01:44:21 - Seriously, what the hell's the chicken?
01:44:23 - And I'll bet what you hated the most
01:44:25 is that they identified me as a co-founder of Facebook,
01:44:29 which I am.
01:44:30 You better lawyer up, asshole,
01:44:32 'cause I'm not coming back for 30%.
01:44:34 I'm coming back for everything.
01:44:36 - Get him out of here.
01:44:43 - It's okay, I will.
01:44:44 - Hang on.
01:44:48 Almost forgot.
01:44:53 Here's your $19,000.
01:44:55 I wouldn't cash it, though.
01:44:55 I drew it on the account you froze.
01:44:57 - I like sitting next to you, Sean.
01:45:04 It makes me look so tough.
01:45:08 (ominous music)
01:45:10 - Ah, that's it.
01:45:24 That's our show for tonight, people.
01:45:27 Look, I wanna see everyone here geared up for a party.
01:45:29 We're gonna walk into that club like it's the Macy's Parade.
01:45:31 Mackie, put it up on the big screen.
01:45:33 We've gotta almost be there.
01:45:34 (audience applauding)
01:45:37 - You all right?
01:45:38 - Yeah.
01:45:39 - You're kinda rough on him.
01:45:42 - That's life in the NFL.
01:45:43 - You know you didn't have to be that rough on him.
01:45:46 - Listen, I'm putting together a party.
01:45:47 - Sean!
01:45:47 - You didn't have to be that rough on him.
01:45:51 He almost killed it.
01:45:52 - I'll send flowers.
01:45:56 Speaking of flowers,
01:45:59 I'm putting together a party after the party
01:46:01 at Kappa Eta Sigma.
01:46:03 - Ashley's a sister.
01:46:05 - Ashley, the intern?
01:46:06 - Yeah.
01:46:07 - I know who she is.
01:46:09 Are you guys actually meeting?
01:46:11 - No.
01:46:12 - A little bit.
01:46:13 Why?
01:46:15 - No. - Excuse me, Mark.
01:46:17 - We were just talking about you.
01:46:19 Just that you're doing a really good job.
01:46:21 - Thanks, I appreciate that.
01:46:23 These came in for you.
01:46:26 - Put 'em on my desk.
01:46:27 - Thanks.
01:46:28 - What's the package?
01:46:35 - Nothing.
01:46:37 - Mackie.
01:46:41 - Yes, sir.
01:46:42 - Refresh.
01:46:43 (audience cheering)
01:46:47 And you're not a hugger.
01:46:53 - I'm not.
01:46:54 (laughing)
01:46:56 - One million.
01:46:58 Who's not shit, babe?
01:47:02 I'm not shit, babe.
01:47:06 (audience cheering)
01:47:09 (rock music)
01:47:23 - You!
01:47:24 - For Mack's transformative development,
01:47:28 a picture sharing application,
01:47:30 a place where you view pictures
01:47:31 that coincide with your digital life.
01:47:33 It is the true digitalization of real life.
01:47:36 - CD?
01:47:37 - You don't have to be.
01:47:38 - You don't just go to a party anymore,
01:47:40 you go to a party with a digital camera
01:47:42 and then your friends relive the party online
01:47:44 and tagging the idea.
01:47:46 - But this music without the rock.
01:47:47 - All right, it's worth finding out.
01:47:49 (rock music)
01:47:52 (rock music)
01:47:54 - Spend hours watching what people do when they log on,
01:48:06 how they check their friends' status updates.
01:48:07 - Wait, that's who invited the music club.
01:48:09 - Check to see which one of their friends
01:48:10 changed their profiles, changed their photos,
01:48:12 and mostly--
01:48:12 - Seriously, what happened to music?
01:48:13 - We lived on farms and then we lived in cities
01:48:16 and now we're going to live on the internet.
01:48:18 - John, stop.
01:48:19 I think something's going on downstairs.
01:48:21 - Attention please.
01:48:33 It's time to give it a halt.
01:48:35 Party is over.
01:48:36 - Oh, good.
01:48:38 (laughing)
01:48:41 - It's the cops.
01:48:41 - Shit.
01:48:42 - Good to see you, officer.
01:48:48 - What can I do for you?
01:48:49 - What's going on?
01:48:52 - Was the music too loud?
01:48:53 We were having a celebration.
01:48:54 - Miss, I need you to button your blouse.
01:48:56 - I can tell them to turn the music down.
01:48:58 That's not mine.
01:49:04 - Okay, we're gonna need identification.
01:49:06 Keep your hands where we can see 'em.
01:49:07 - Oh my God.
01:49:09 - You got anything else in your pocket, sir?
01:49:10 I should know that.
01:49:11 - No, no sir, no.
01:49:11 - Don't be stupid now.
01:49:12 - I don't, I don't.
01:49:13 - Okay, thank you.
01:49:15 - What's this?
01:49:20 - That's an EpiPen.
01:49:21 - And this?
01:49:24 - That's my inhaler.
01:49:25 - How old are you?
01:49:27 - 21.
01:49:30 - 21.
01:49:32 - 21.
01:49:32 - I'm 21.
01:49:33 - Flying only makes it worse.
01:49:35 - I'm sorry, I shouldn't have lied.
01:49:38 (phone ringing)
01:49:41 - Hello?
01:49:51 - Listen, something's happened.
01:49:53 - Shit, it's all right, it's gonna be all right.
01:50:04 I posted Bon and I wasn't doing anything.
01:50:07 I mean, I've got allergies.
01:50:08 - Interns.
01:50:14 - It was just a party.
01:50:16 - This is gonna be news, Sean.
01:50:20 It's gonna be online any second.
01:50:22 - I know.
01:50:24 - You know, with an intern.
01:50:26 - No, it's cool, I have it under control.
01:50:28 - I will get it under control.
01:50:30 I will call someone and see what the next move is,
01:50:32 but this is gonna be news now.
01:50:35 - You don't think Wardo was involved, do you?
01:50:37 - Do you think?
01:50:38 - No.
01:50:40 Or Manningham, one of them, somebody,
01:50:42 somebody sent the coke in there because it got in there.
01:50:45 You believe me, this is gonna be fine.
01:50:47 Right?
01:50:52 Go home, Sean.
01:50:56 (somber music)
01:50:59 - Mark?
01:51:13 Mark?
01:51:17 We're done for the day.
01:51:21 - Yeah.
01:51:22 Yeah, I was just sitting there.
01:51:25 - What happened to Sean?
01:51:26 - He still owns 7% of the company.
01:51:29 All you had all day was that salad.
01:51:35 You wanna get something to eat?
01:51:37 - I can't.
01:51:39 - I'm not a bad guy.
01:51:48 - I know that.
01:51:50 When there's emotional testimony, I assume.
01:51:52 When there's emotional testimony,
01:51:54 I assume 85% of it is exaggeration.
01:51:56 - And the other 15?
01:51:58 - Perjury.
01:51:59 Creation, myths, meet a devil.
01:52:01 - What happens now?
01:52:05 - Cy and the others are having a stake on University Avenue.
01:52:12 Then they'll come back up to the office
01:52:13 and start working on a settlement agreement
01:52:15 to present to you.
01:52:17 - They're gonna settle?
01:52:18 - Oh yeah.
01:52:19 And you're gonna have to pay a little extra.
01:52:21 - Why?
01:52:22 - So that these guys sign a non-disclosure agreement.
01:52:24 They say one unflattering word about you in public,
01:52:26 you own their wife and kids.
01:52:27 - I invented Facebook.
01:52:29 - I'm talking about a jury.
01:52:31 I specialize in voir dire, jury selection.
01:52:34 What a jury sees when they look at a defendant.
01:52:36 Clothes, hair, speaking style, likability.
01:52:39 - Likability.
01:52:40 - I've been licensed to practice law for all of 20 months
01:52:43 and I could get a jury to believe
01:52:44 that you planted the story about Eduardo and the chicken.
01:52:47 Watch what else.
01:52:49 Why weren't you at Sean's sorority party that night?
01:52:52 You think I'm the one that called the police?
01:52:53 - Doesn't matter.
01:52:54 I asked a question, now everybody's thinking about it.
01:52:56 You've lost your jury in the first 10 minutes.
01:52:58 - Farm animals.
01:53:01 - Yeah.
01:53:02 - I was drunk and angry and stupid.
01:53:06 - And blogging.
01:53:07 - And blogging.
01:53:07 - Pay them.
01:53:11 In the scheme of things, it's a speeding ticket.
01:53:14 That's what Cy will tell you tomorrow.
01:53:18 - Do you think anybody would mind
01:53:19 if I stayed and used the computer for a minute?
01:53:21 - I can't imagine it would be a problem.
01:53:23 - Thanks.
01:53:24 I appreciate your help today.
01:53:27 - You're not an asshole, Mark.
01:53:33 You're just trying so hard to be.
01:53:37 (footsteps thudding)
01:53:40 (door creaking)
01:53:43 (door creaking)
01:53:46 (keyboard clicking)
01:53:58 (keyboard clicking)
01:54:01 (upbeat music)
01:54:24 (upbeat music)
01:54:26 ♪ How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people ♪
01:54:48 ♪ Now that you know who you are ♪
01:54:53 ♪ What do you want to be ♪
01:54:58 ♪ Don't have to travel very far ♪
01:55:03 ♪ As far as the eye can see ♪
01:55:08 ♪ How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people ♪
01:55:15 ♪ How often have you been there ♪
01:55:20 ♪ Humbly enough to know ♪
01:55:25 ♪ What did you see when you left ♪
01:55:30 ♪ Nothing but doesn't show ♪
01:55:35 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:55:38 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:55:40 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man too ♪
01:55:45 ♪ Keep all your money in a big brown bag ♪
01:55:49 ♪ Inside a zoo ♪
01:55:51 ♪ Gonna make a zoo ♪
01:55:55 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:55:57 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:56:00 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man too ♪
01:56:05 ♪ How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people ♪
01:56:12 ♪ What you do with magic ♪
01:56:17 ♪ Nothing to be that way ♪
01:56:22 ♪ Now that you found another key ♪
01:56:27 ♪ What are you going to play ♪
01:56:32 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:56:34 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:56:37 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man too ♪
01:56:42 ♪ Keep all your money in a big brown bag ♪
01:56:46 ♪ Inside a zoo ♪
01:56:48 ♪ Gonna make a zoo ♪
01:56:51 ♪ Baby, baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:56:54 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:56:56 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man too ♪
01:57:01 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:57:04 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:57:06 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man too ♪
01:57:11 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
01:57:13 ♪ Baby, you're a rich man ♪
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