Mark Zuckerberg Gives $990 Million To Charity
mrspoonsi writes with this excerpt from Business Insider: "This morning, Mark Zuckerberg announced plans to give 18 million Facebook shares to charity by the end of the month. Facebook is currently trading at $55 per share, so Zuckerberg's gift is worth just under $1 billion. The money will go toward Zuckerberg's foundation, the Silicon Valley Community Foundation and The Breakthrough Prize In Life Science, a [Nobel] Prize-like award. Zuckereberg is giving his shares away as part of a secondary stock offering from Facebook. Reuters says Zuckerberg will sell 41.4 million shares, reducing his voting power in the company from 58.8% to 56.1%. Other insiders selling include board member Marc Andreessen, who will sell 1.65 million shares. Facebook is selling 27 million."
to his own charity?
Aren't you?
A tax move or trying to buy a legacy... I wonder. This reminds me of the story of the founding of the Nobel Prize.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize#History
Either give it away or get top dollar, but never sell yourself cheap.
TFA Headline was misleading...saying it like this:
"X gives [huge sum of money] to charity."
X being an often criticized figure and "charity" being the incongruent thing that supposedly makes the headline interesting.
But it buries the lead...the story isn't some tech/dork/genius/villain giving a huge sum of money away to needy people...it's about him transferring it to his own charity.
Huge difference.
Jerry Sandusky used the Second Mile Charity to find victims. Clinton uses his charity to maintain his personal/family brand and...I admit...do good things. Bill Gates, I think somewhere in his brain he wants to be altruistic for some philosophical reason, but his charity really just pumps M$ products and tries to make teachers be paid by performance.
IMHO, Gates and Zuck are bad models for tech chartiy. I would rather him take that money and pay off every home mortgage in the poor communities in his area....Oakland. The also need to stop all attempts to use his charity to get student data via "donating" some student info system and calling it some innovative name.
Thank you Dave Raggett
in a bubble-soon-to-burst web site?
at least the poor can crumple up the stock certificates and burn them for heat this winter. gee, thanks, mark.
Let's see if Gates can outdo this. So far Bill's "philanthropy" has been a joke.
Oh? Do tell..
Hell, say what you will about Shumckaberg, but it looks like this was a good move. The Silicon Valley Community Foundation does good work as far as I can tell. It's not like he's investing back into technology or anything else that will do him any direct good - again, as far as I can tell.
Politics; n. : A religion whereby man is god.
That's what I hate about those greedy rich people. Always giving their money away to charity, endowing the arts and building sports facilities for all to enjoy. Who the hell do they think they are?
That this exists is easily more hilarious than anything he's ever said about FWD.us or Code.org. What community exists in Silicon Valley?
this, a million times this. beta is DISGUSTING
Check the "Silicon Valley Community Foundation" web page, and you'll see it's not a charity --- it's a big-money investment firm that manages accounts for other big-money charities. This is part of the move to make "charity" a highly profitable enterprise for big business; ways to shuffle around tax-sheltered billions invested in scummy megacorporations.
then compete with the public school teaching system
It was his pocket lint. His pocket change is much more.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I was somehow expecting a link to an article about CryptoLocker here...
I'm willing to bet a large sum of money that Bill Gates' legitimate philanthropic efforts vastly dwarfs yours but, hey, feel free to describe his as a joke.
Is this cashing out of Facebook an indication of endtimes for Facebook?
If he wants to donate to a charity, make it real\good ones, NOT his own. Plenty of charities that have been around for years and are known to be valid.
Similar to other $B folks it goes to their own foundation so they can still control that money to drive whatever cause they wish. In this case it sounds like they just print more share for it..? Or FB as a whole provide that share... i.e. all FB shareholders chip it for Mr. Zuckerberg to play?
Why not just cash out some shares and donate the money to various charities? Is there some advantage for charities to actually hold the shares of Facebook?
We'll make great pets
Usually the complain is that they give away MS software licenses. The conspiracy there being that they'll be hooked and once they move beyond soul crushing poverty they'll pay for the software. And that's disgusting when he should be giving out free IBM and RedHat contracts so that those vendors will be contractors when the children stop having to eat dirt to keep the hunger pangs away. The other big complaint I've seen is that they've invested in a refinery or something. As we all know, oil companies are evil and the last thing Africa needs is more local industry.
Basically, the problem is that he's Bill Gates, and that's a bad thing. Every dollar M$ made is tainted blood money. They made Dell pay a site license for Windows installation! Have you forgotten the burned villages of the Browser Wars? Remember that time they sent anthrax to that Linux User's Group? We are all victims. No amount of malaria vaccinations and AIDS research and all that other shit could ever atone for such depraved crimes.
Next he'll incorporate in the Netherlands and start a "charity" dedicated to "preserving social networks" or whatever and funnel everything through that?
I'm willing to bet they vastly dwarf most people even if you adjust it for their net worth or earnings or what have you. He's done some incredible charitable work. He got a tax benefit just like everyone else who donates.
What a crap gift, lol. Facebook stocks have a 100% chance of going down the toilet in the next 5 years. I'm not surprised it said they'll sell them off immediately...although telling people that will drop the price ahead of time.
http://www.geek.com/geek-cetera/bill-gates-loses-worlds-richest-title-after-giving-28-billion-to-charity-1324573/
28 > 1.
And that was 2011.
Seeing as he cashed out only 2.7% of his earnings, my best guess is no.
Yes, pay off the mortgage of poor people. The ones that are living paycheck to paycheck. The ones who would start shopping at the Gap and buying iPads if they just had the mortgage paid off. The ones who would lease a new car if they had no mortgage payment. The ones who wouldn't put a single penny into their retirement savings, kids college fund or other investment if they had no mortgage.
The solution to poverty doesn't lie in giving someone money, it lies in education. Teach these poor communities how to manage basic finances, how to not stretch their budgets, how to avoid having kids before entering the work force or finishing school, and you will solve many of the problems. You'll never solve all of them, but it will take care of the majority.
Hopefully they keep trying to outdo each other; they've got plenty more money to give away.
and other commenters have pointed out similar things...
first, i'll grant you that my comment did not mention some of the work they do for the neediest globally, it is an oversight that should matter in evaluating "tech billionaires" and how effective/self-serving their charity work proves to be.
I'm mostly frustrated that so much of what made M$ so bad is going into **how** they do the work in the developing world, on a macro scale, but this is off topic.
second, to my main criticism of "tech billionaires" and how they do charity is how self-serving and low-return *most* of it is.
I imagine the parts of the Gates Foundation that are the most effective correlate very closely with the parts where Gates & minions have the *least* input into decision making.
Delivering water to communities in Africa is more a problem you throw money at to the right people, because there are obviously already people trying to accomplish the task, the best option just doesn't have the resources.
That's still **good** but we can do much, much better. That's my point.
Why not start right in the Bay Area? Why not just start paying off family mortgages and boosting school budgets?
990 Million Dollars of that...seriously...i'm not an isolationist but have you ever heard of how in a commercial airliner emergency, the mother should put *her own air mask* on first b/c she needs to be coherent to help the baby?
Nation building begins at home!
Thank you Dave Raggett
The likelihood of the facebook stocks not tanking soon is pretty well near zero. They still don't have a meaningful long-term business plan that leads to profit and a product with long-term potential. The marketing potential of peoples' wall updates is limited.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
I once considered setting up a 501(c)3 so my distributed gamedev platform project could accept donations, but I decided against it (the world's governments are not ready for citizens to have a communal OS, yet). If you're a charity you can allocate most of the donations as administration fees and a small fraction for the actual charity work. "Nonprofit" is the biggest misnomer I've ever seen, 501(c)3's are some of the most profitable business models I've encountered, apart from artificial information scarcity rackets in the patent and copyright futures market -- charities are far more stable than these.
I've done work with a fun-run for teens nil-profit, and they actually don't take admin fees, don't pay the doctors, judges, nutritionists, etc. speakers that come to educate kids about the real world after running out their rambunction, and use all their donations to buy tee-shirts and banners, fliers, news-ads, web hosting, and stuff they give to the kids. So, it's not impossible to run a charity that gives 100% of the donations to the charity, but it's also not impossible to run a charity that's basically a huge tax write off where you re-absorb most of the money in admin fees.
So if $1 billion is worth 3%, than that means:
Facebook is apparently worth $34 Billion.
$20 Billion of that being Enron's, I mean Mark's, personal fortune.
Convince one rube, you might make $50 bucks.
Convince a thousand, you might make a living.
Convince everyone, and you can make whatever you say that you do.
Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
Actually most of the people were presuming MZ is evil and incapable of doing anything without personal gain, rather than most rich people.
Yes, that's unfair. However, since MZ controls FB with his >50% holding, he is personally responsible for the continual bait-and-switch privacy behaviors at FB which no-one can claim is nice. Note also that most of this pattern occurred before FB had a 'fiscal duty to its shareholders'.
So it's not unreasonable to ask for a higher level of evidence before believing that BG or MZ are behaving altruistically.
I'd like to see how the donation is reported. I guess it's good that these guys donate so much to charity, but the tax code makes it a no-brainer; financially and for PR.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
Well when you hit that level, I suspect simply accounting for cost of living rather than net worth is more accurate.
We are all victims. No amount of malaria vaccinations and AIDS research and all that other shit could ever atone for such depraved crimes.
Given the sarcastic tone of your post, I take it you were confounded when you read about Nazi scientists being tried for crimes against humanity...
...Mark, I'm also accepting money for my charity organization !!!
I sure prefer to see it spent this way then surreptitiously funding political activity through tax exempt organizations like George Soros.
If a wealthy individual gives away $1 million to a charity, what do their motives matter?
He gave shares, not money. There is a difference.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Or...it could be that a large part of those efforts in Africa are conflicting with either the stated goals of helping people or that there's a policy push to indirectly encourage some sort of involvement from industry which otherwise would not get involved because it's not profitable enough. It'd seem clear, I'd think, then that perhaps the goal should be to *be* the industry that can provides the local jobs while taking on tasks that are profitable--but not substantially enough alone to be fulfilled through market forces alone--to effectively be the social safety net that governments in the area are failing to be.
See, it's great to try to introduce the broad strategies to hypothetically bring about a substantial improvement in the lives of people, but you have to understand that the root cause of a lot of the suffering isn't because of a lack of companies per se or that a few policy changes in a foreign government will magically end strife. Instead, there is a need for a systemic overhaul in a lot of countries (perhaps in the West as well--which may be heavily coasting on its own inertia--, but that's really another topic). Charities can't really do that. Only the people can.
Perhaps it'd be workable if a team of diplomats came in with a receptive government and receptive people and then these strategy-based methods would work. But most charity is of the "feed a man a fish" variety precisely because charity is rarely in a position to overhaul a country on its own. Overhaul small communities through individual attention, maybe--but that's bottom up work and clearly the Gates Foundation is very top down. Of course, an organization like the Gates Foundation is funded well enough it probably could do all three, top, middle, and bottom simultaneously. So, perhaps the issue most of all is that of all the charities who rarely are able to take on such a task, the Gates Foundation is one of the few capable but apparently not involved in such.
...I don't think the death of privacy and commercialization of human relationships was worth it.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
That's going to be one helluva tax deduction applied against his income taxes.
add /?nobeta=1 at the end of the url
I would consider this as a real donation if:
- Cannot be deducted from taxes
- It had gone to a national donations pool, and then distributed among random charities.
To give money to himself it's not a real donation. Because probably the "operational costs" of the foundation will eat a lot of that money away.
At least, it's better than most of the famous people who spent millions in drugs....
I spent my adult life trying to make people's life better through technology -- I have saved lives when it wasn't my job to. I got people off destructive drugs and taught them a skill. I did security at planned parenthood and soup kitchen, and helped people stay in school. And yes, I did all this to feed my hero complex. Now someone who is roughly my age gives away less % of his wealth than I have, and it's front page news. Where's my goddamn slashdot article?
www.f3.to
Yea I thought the trend of hating on Bill Gates was over... it just reminds of young kids who hate stuff because its the cool thing to hate at the time. Truth be told Gates' company changed computing forever, and he made a fortune. He is giving tons of that away to try to better humanity. You can continue your pissing contests of "hes doing it for PR blah blah blah he sucks omgez" but at the end of the day the money he is donating is helping people, regardless. What % of your paychecks do you donate?
I spent my adult life trying to make people's life better through technology -- I have saved lives when it wasn't my job to. I got people off destructive drugs and taught them a skill. I did security at planned parenthood and soup kitchen, and helped people stay in school. And yes, I did all this to feed my hero complex. Now someone who is roughly my age gives away less % of his wealth than I have, and it's front page news. Where's my goddamn slashdot article? www.f3.to
Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
Technically he is not donating anything. The public corporation known as Facebook is donating 18 million shares of its stock. Still not a bad deal, but one should give credit where credit is due. In addition, I wonder what the other shareholders in FB feel about the issue of 18 million shares of stock without renumeration as it will water down their EPS and stock value. In short, it's easy to be generous with other people's money.
This sounds vaguely like a 'capitalist economics is an inescapable force of nature' argument, but conveyed needlessly cryptically.
What exactly are you trying to say?
He donated shares in Facebook. Probably he will get a huge tax deduction calculated at the current value of the Facebook stock he donated. Could it be that he is donating now because FB stock value is going to tank? He gets a deduction at the current value od stock that will soon be vastly less valuable?
Sort of like the Nobel Prize Obama got for what he allegedly was going to do (Nobel Prize comittees decisions in many people opinions suddenly became worthless political agenda driven rubbish) ???
Let us Know when HE ACTUALLY give anything away, not some PR hype trash that means nothing until the check clears.
Quite a few intelligent and informative commenters here today, while the post itself is either completely moronic or dishonest.
Zucker-dood isn't giving anything away, doucheys.
They claimed the very same thing about the Rockefellers, Mellons, du Ponts, Harrimans (Mortimers), Morgans, et al., and they simply shifted their wealth and ownership over to foundations and trusts to hide it, and better control it, and avoid taxation.
A short item from the 1968 Congressional Report on Foundations and Trusts, by Rep. Wright Patman, the greatest populist out of Texas, and perhaps America's absolutely greatest populist of all time, a real man of the people!
Congressman Wright Patman, chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, proved in 1967 Hearings that 14 Rockefeller foundations held assets of more than $1 billion in Standard Oil stock. Not only did they pay no tax on this stock, but it gave them permanent control over the family owned firm. Rival financiers could not buy control of Standard Oil because its stock was insulated by foundation ownership. As Patman pointed out, the fact that the Rockefellers escaped paying huge sums in taxes gave them an unsurpassed market advantage over other firms which had to pay normal rates of taxation. The agitation for increased "corporate taxation" adds to Rockefeller's advantage. Patman said, "The Foundations are the best investments the Rockefeller family could have made."
The poster's homework assignment is to read the following:
http://www.soilandhealth.org/03sov/0303critic/030304lberg/030304toc.html
He gives the money to himself, and a foundation that he is also in and wants to "extend life". So, no taxes, he controls the money, and searches how to become immortal. Google's larry, in it too.
Hey watch me sell a bunch of my stock then give away some money to charity to avoid the tax.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
What we have in a non egalitarian world, where some persons like Mark Zuckenbeg or Bill Gates accumulate mountain of cash by piggy backing on the rest of society, and especially their own employees that do the real world for them.
Of course making super-riches means making poors, and the system can have trouble to sustain itself. Enter charity, which is kind of band-aid so that the poor can live, while praising the donator, and maintaining the idea that the poors are responsible for their fate.
.
I would prefer income gaps between the Zuckenberg and Mr Everybody to be smaller. There is no reason why someone should earn hundreds of times the pay of a regular worker. A nice way of doing that would be to enforce a 20 fold ratio between the higher and the lower income in a given business. That way, if the big boss want a raise, he needs to grant one to the person that cleans the toilets.
Tee Hee Hee.
And King Zuk owns it too!
I really think that this ought to be very beneficial for the people that are going to be receiving this money. I don't have anything else to say. -- Anonymous.