查马斯·帕里哈皮蒂亚

查马斯·帕里哈皮蒂亚(英语:Chamath Palihapitiya;1976年9月3日[1]斯里兰卡出生的加拿大美国人,是风险投资主义者、工程师SPAC的发起人、创始人和Social Capital英语Social Capital (venture capital)首席执行官

Chamath Palihapitiya
查马斯·帕里哈皮蒂亚
2016
出生 (1976-09-03) 1976年9月3日48岁)
斯里兰卡
公民权
  • Canada
  • United States
教育程度Lisgar Collegiate Institute英语Lisgar Collegiate Institute
母校滑铁卢大学
职业
  • 企业家
  • 商人
  • 风险资本家
活跃时期2007-
配偶Brigette Lau(2018年离婚)
儿女4

2007年到2011年在Facebook是早期高级管理人员。离开Facebook后,开始了自己的基金。

已隐藏部分未翻译内容,欢迎参与翻译

Palihapitiya was an early senior executive at Facebook, working at the company from 2007 to 2011. Following his departure from Facebook, Palihapitiya started his fund, The Social+Capital Partnership, through which he invested in several companies, including Yammer and Slack. The Social+Capital Partnership changed its name to Social Capital in 2015. He is a co-host of technology podcast All In.[2][3]

Early life and education

Palihapitiya was born on 3 September 1976 in Sri Lanka.[4] In 1982, Palihapitiya moved with his family to Canada at age five; his father Gamage had been posted to the High Commission of Sri Lanka, Ottawa. Five years later, in 1986, the posting came to an end, and the family applied for refugee status rather than returning home, on the basis that Gamage had been criticized for his views on the violence during the Sri Lankan Civil War.[4]

Palihapitiya's father was frequently unemployed, and his mother did low-paying housekeeping jobs.[5] At age 14, Palihapitiya worked at a Burger King to support his family.[6] His father died on October 2014.[7]

He attended Lisgar Collegiate Institute.[8][9] After graduating from the University of Waterloo in 1999 with a degree in electrical engineering, Palihapitiya worked for a year as a derivatives trader at the investment bank BMO Nesbitt Burns. He then accepted a job offer at Winamp and moved to California.[10]

Career

2004–2011: Winamp, AOL, Mayfield, and Facebook

Palihapitiya joined Winamp, which was subsequently acquired by AOL, here he became the company's youngest vice president ever, heading its instant messaging division in 2004.[11][12] In 2005, he left AOL and joined Mayfield Fund; in 2007 he left Mayfield and joined Facebook, which was then a little more than three years old.[11]

Palihapitiya's work at Facebook in the first year was messy from his account.[13] Palihapitiya led the release of Facebook Beacon, which failed and led to lawsuits. After this failure, Palihapitiya pitched leading Growth, where his team focused entirely on new user growth. After four years, Facebook hit 1B users.[14][15] Before leaving Facebook, Palihapitiya led the Facebook Phone and Facebook Home projects.[16][13]

Steven Levy wrote in Facebook: The Inside Story that Palihapitiya was regarded as a "bully" at Facebook,[17] and that he had made many of his subordinates cry regularly.[18]

2011–present: Social Capital

Multi-LP Venture Capital Fund

In 2011, he left Facebook[19] and started his own fund, The Social+Capital Partnership, with his then-wife. The firm changed its name to Social Capital in 2015.[11][20] Through the fund, Palihapitiya invested in a number of companies, including Glooko, Inc, Yammer, SecondMarket, Slack, and Box.[21][22][23] As of 2015, the fund had more than $1.1 billion in total assets most of which came from external investors (i.e. LPs).[24][25][26]

Palihapitiya in 2007 speaking at a Facebook event.

In 2018, there was a massive decrease in Social Capital fund's operations and a significant exodus of top management and co-founders.[27][28][29] Axios reported that Palihapitiya was spending a significant amount of time with his new girlfriend in Italy and rarely showed up to the office or answered emails from employees.[30] The firm returned investor capital and converted into a family office although continued to manage some external capital on a no-fee basis.[31][32][33]

In December 2019 Palihapitiya stepped down as a member of the board of directors of Slack.[34][35][36]

Transition to Single GP Technology Holding Company

After transitioning to a single GP firm, essentially Palihapitiya's family office, in 2018, Palihapitiya said he wanted to return to first principles and restructure the firm to better align with the long-term interests of entrepreneurs, not just limited partners (LPs).[来源请求]

Since then, Social Capital has made investments in three areas: climate science, life sciences and biotechnology, and the decentralization of the digital economy through platforms such as blockchain, crypto, and digital assets. Palihapitiya manages from a balance sheet of permanent capital.[37][38][39][40]

SPAC platform

Palihapitiya previously said that he reserved symbols all the way from IPOA through IPOZ.[41]

In 2019, Palihapitiya helped take Virgin Galactic public through a SPAC, previously known as IPOA.[42][43] In March 2021 Palihapitiya sold his personal stake Virgin Galactic for around US$213 million.[44][45] In February 2022, Palihapitiya stepped down as chairman of Virgin Galactic.[46]

In 2020, Social Capital Hedosophia took Opendoor, an online real estate marketplace, public through a SPAC. OpenDoor raised $1 billion through the merger, $400 million of which came from the SPAC and an additional $600 million through PIPE investors. Palihapitiya accounted for $100 million of the PIPE.[47]

In 2021, Palihapitiya announced he planned to help take SoFi, a financial services platform,[48] and Clover Health, a Medicare insurance company, public through SPACs.[49] This gained Palihapitiya criticism from the Financial Times, which said that he is "shilling risky reverse-mergers to retail investors on a almost bimonthly basis".[50]

Following the Clover Health SPAC, Hindenburg Research, a financial analyst and short-selling specialist firm, issued a report about this transaction accusing Palihapitiya of luring investors into a “broken business”,[51] argumenting that he failed to inform them about an active Department of Justice investigation into Clover's alleged deceptive business practices.[52] Palihapitiya made more than $290 million from the deal based on a $25k investment.[53][54] In addition the Clover Health co-founder/CEO's previous company, CarePoint Health, a hospital conglomerate in New Jersey, was accused of price gouging customers and according to a NJ state commission siphoning off $150 million to himself and his friends bankrupting the company and causing a hospital crisis in NJ.[55] Regulators in NJ called for an investigation of Clover Health because of the CEO's previous actions.[56] The Securities and Exchange Commission opened an investigation into the allegations set forth in the Hindenburg Research report on February 4.[57][58][59]

During the GameStop short squeeze, Palihapitiya repeatedly attacked Robinhood and its founders for being unethical by selling payment for order flow to HFT firms like Citadel Securities and pushed his fans to switch over to SoFi, which was merging with his SPAC yet failed to mention that SoFi employs the same practice of selling payment for order flow to HFT firms (including to Citadel Securities) and owns a 16% stake in Apex Clearing Corp, a clearing house involved in the controversy.[60][61][62]

In April 2021, John Coates, acting director of the SEC's corporate-finance division, criticized Palihapitiya's views on the benefits of SPACs over traditional IPOs:

Some — but far from all — practitioners and commentators have claimed that an advantage of SPACs over traditional IPOs is lesser securities-law liability exposure for targets and the public company itself.

——John Coates,"SPACs, IPOs and Liability Risk under the Securities Laws",U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission[63]
Coates clarified that a judge could rule a SPAC is similar enough to an IPO that the lesser securities law liability would be void.[64]

In June 2021, Social Capital Survetta filed for four new SPACs which would focus on biotechnology companies, under the stock tickers DNAA through DNAD.[65]

Political positions and activities

Palihapitiya has donated to the Democratic Party.[66] As of February 2021, he has reportedly donated $1.3 million to the party over the past decade.[67][68] He donated $7,500 to Republican Ted Cruz in 2011.[68] In March 2020, Palihapitiya told The New York Times that he would like to see Michael Bloomberg at the top of the Democratic ticket in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries, paired with Amy Klobuchar or Elizabeth Warren.[69][70]

Immigration reform and policy advocacy

Palihapitiya was listed as one of the "Founders" of the lobbying group FWD.us.[71] The group launched on 11 April 2013, and its goals include immigration reform, improving education, and enabling technological innovation, all in a United States context.[72][73] An article in The New Republic stated that Palihapitiya received a weekly report about FWD.us and also quoted him as saying, in response to controversy around the FWD.us political lobbying strategy: "The folks that are actually people that run that day to day are sophisticated and understand the nuances of how to affect it ... It's a really gnarly, gnarly thing having to deal with Washington. And to be honest with you, my perspective was, it's a really good investment because it's a good way to pay it forward, and I'm really glad there are other people other than me who are dealing with it who have the patience and resolve to figure it out."[74]

San Francisco inequality and housing controversy

At Bloomberg's Next Big Thing conference in Sausalito, California, Palihapitiya made remarks critical of San Francisco's then mayor, Ed Lee, and proposed that the city provide subsidized housing to low-income residents funded by an equity tax on startups, with the tax-and-subsidy schemes potentially restricted to particular zones of the city. This led to a heated debate between Palihapitiya and super angel Ron Conway.[75][76] Conway, a supporter of Lee, defended the city's policies, argued that things would get better for all residents, and noted that Palihapitiya lives in Palo Alto rather than in the city.[77][78] In a later clarification to TechCrunch, Palihapitiya outlined his vision in more detail and described how his views on inequality and social mobility were shaped by his experience growing up with relatively poor immigrant parents in Canada.[79]

Criticism of Facebook and social media

In November 2017, Palihapitiya said that, for ethical reasons, he regretted helping Facebook to become the largest social media platform.[80] He said,

The short-term, dopamine-driven feedback loops that we have created are destroying how society works: no civil discourse, no collaboration, misinformation, mistruth and it's not an American problem. This is not about Russian ads. This is a global problem. It is eroding the core foundations of how people behave by and between each other.[81]

After criticism from Facebook for his remarks, Palihapitiya said,

I genuinely believe that Facebook is a force for good in the world, so I'd like to expand on my comments ... My comments were meant to start an important conversation, not to criticize one company—particularly one I love. In 2017, many of us have grappled with the unintended consequences of the products we've built. Social media platforms in particular have been used and abused in ways that we, their architects, never imagined. Much blame has been thrown and guilt felt, but the important thing is what we as an industry do now to ensure that our impact on society continues to be a positive one.[82][83]

He reiterated this criticism in a podcast with Kara Swisher.[84]

California gubernatorial campaign

On 25 January 2021, Palihapitiya announced he would challenge incumbent California Governor Gavin Newsom in the event Newsom were recalled.[85][86] If elected, Palihapitiya said he would cut the state income tax rate from 16 to 0 percent, provide free education vouchers, allow for a two thousand dollar credit for every child born in California, and work to make California the center of climate and technology jobs. He shared a campaign website that was created by a supporter.[87][88]

In February 2021, however, Palihapitiya declared he would not run for Governor.[87][89]

Comments on Uyghur genocide

In January 2022, Palihapitiya said on the podcast All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg to co-host Jason Calacanis that the Uyghur genocide does not concern him:

Nobody cares about what's happening to the Uyghurs, okay. You bring it up because you care and I think it's nice that you care. The rest of us don't care. I'm just telling you a very hard, ugly truth. Of all the things that I care about, yes, it is below my line.[90][91][92][93]

Palihapitiya said he and most Americans care more about domestic economic issues than the human rights abuses of China's Uyghur minority.[94] In response, the Golden State Warriors issued a statement saying that Palihapitiya "does not speak on behalf of our franchise, and his views certainly don't reflect those of our organization."[91][95] Palihapitiya made further remarks in a tweet, saying that he recognized he came across as "lacking empathy" and that "To be clear, my belief is that human rights matter, whether in China, the United States, or elsewhere. Full stop."[95][92]

Investments and philanthropy

During his time at Facebook, Palihapitiya invested in several startups through Embarcadero Ventures, a venture capital fund.[19]

In 2010, Palihapitiya helped to buy the Golden State Warriors for $450 million;[96] he remains a minority stakeholder and board member of the team.[97] According to the team as of 2022 he was a "limited investor with no day-to-day operating functions".[98] In 2022, Palihapitiya’s 10% stake in the team was worth $520 million - a 2000% return on his $25 million initial investment.[99]

Palihapitiya has donated consistently to his alma mater, the University of Waterloo, including a $25 million donation towards the engineering department in 2018.[100]

In 2021, he donated $7 million to provide clean drinking water to 1,000 families in California's central valley through a partnership with one2one, an American foundation and Source Global, the maker of solar-powered hydropanels that extract potable water from the air.[101]

Personal life

After graduating from college, Palihapitiya followed his future wife, Brigette Lau, to California.[102][103] They had three children together, and divorced in 2018.[104][105]

Palihapitiya now lives in California with Nathalie Dompe, an Italian pharmaceutical heiress, model, and CEO of Dompe Holdings, whom he started dating in 2018,[106][107] and with whom he has one child.[104]

In a December 2017 interview, Palihapitiya said that he keeps his children as far away from technology as possible, except for the occasional movie, explaining "I don't like this co-dependency of 'they need to rely on me, and when they can't, I feed them a device because that becomes a babysitter'."[102]

Palihapitiya has three World Series of Poker (WSOP) and two World Poker Tour (WPT) cashes for a total of $175,801.[108] In 2011, he finished 101st out of 6,865 entries in the World Series of Poker's Main Event.[109]

Palihapitiya purchased a $75 million Bombardier Global 7500 in 2020.[110]

参见

参考

  1. ^ Palihapitiya, Chamath. Life…. Medium. 2015-09-03 [2021-04-17]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). 
  2. ^ 5 Things You Might Not Know About Chamath Palihapitiya. Benzinga. 2021-01-10 [2021-06-10]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (English). 
  3. ^ Levy, Ari. Early Google exec got Larry Page's backing to build a start-up factory focused on saving the planet. CNBC. 30 July 2021 [30 July 2021]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英国英语). 
  4. ^ 4.0 4.1 Lee, Allen. 10 Things You Didn't Know about Chamath Palihapitiya. Money Inc. 2020-07-08 [2021-09-16]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (美国英语). 
  5. ^ How Did Chamath Palihapitiya Make His Money?. Financhill. 2021-01-19 [2021-09-23]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (美国英语). 
  6. ^ Bennett, Drake. Social+Capital, the League of Extraordinarily Rich Gentlemen. Bloomberg News. July 27, 2012 [May 15, 2021]. (原始内容存档于April 7, 2021). 
  7. ^ 存档副本. [2022-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  8. ^ Bryant, Adam. Chamath Palihapitiya of Social Capital on the Paradox of Ego and Humility. The New York Times. 20 October 2017 [22 May 2017]. (原始内容存档于20 October 2017). 
  9. ^ Lisgar Collegiate graduates to celebrate venerable building. Heritage Ottawa. [22 May 2018]. (原始内容存档于23 May 2018). 
  10. ^ CHAMATH PALIHAPITIYA ON FACEBOOK, AIM AND WINAMP. [15 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于20 January 2021). 
  11. ^ 11.0 11.1 11.2 Rusli, Evelyn. In Flip-Flops and Jeans, An Unconventional Venture Capitalist. The New York Times. 6 October 2011 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于7 May 2013). 
  12. ^ Stone, Madeline. Meet Facebook's most successful alum, a borderline billionaire who owns the Golden State Warriors. Business Insider. 1 June 2015 [22 May 2018]. (原始内容存档于23 May 2018). 
  13. ^ 13.0 13.1 The Facebook Phone Would Have Been an 'iPhone-Like Moment,' Says the Exec Who Led It. Vox. [2022-04-05]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  14. ^ Bennett, Drake. Social+Capital, the League of Extraordinarily Rich Gentlemen. 26 July 2012 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于29 April 2013). 
  15. ^ Chamath Palihapitiya – How we put Facebook on the path to 1 billion users. Genius. [2021-09-23]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  16. ^ A Facebook phone that's pure Google at heart. The Verge. [2022-04-05]. (原始内容存档于2020-11-12). 
  17. ^ Levy, Steven. Facebook: The Inside Story. 2020. ISBN 0241297974. 
  18. ^ Dodds, Laurence. The inside story of how Facebook went from idealism to scandal. The Telegraph. 18 April 2020 [11 January 2021]. ISSN 0307-1235. (原始内容存档于28 January 2021) (英国英语). 
  19. ^ 19.0 19.1 TechCrunch. [6 October 2020]. (原始内容存档于27 October 2020). 
  20. ^ Arrington, Michael. Facebook VP Chamath Palihapitiya Forms New Venture Fund, The Social+Capital Partnership. TechCrunch. 3 June 2011 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于12 April 2013). 
  21. ^ Rao, Leena. Former Facebook VP Chamath Palihapitiya Leads $17M Round In Enterprise Social Networking Platform Yammer. TechCrunch. 27 September 2011 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于2 May 2013). 
  22. ^ Billings, Mike. The Daily Startup: Paper Drawing App Aims for Enterprise With New Funding. The Wall Street Journal Blog. 17 March 2015 [22 April 2015]. (原始内容存档于25 April 2015). 
  23. ^ Marshall, Matt. SecondMarket raises $15M at $200M valuation from former Facebook exec. VentureBeat. 2 November 2011 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于24 February 2013). 
  24. ^ Rao, Leena. Is Social+Capital's Chamath Palihapitiya the future of venture capital?. FORTUNE. 23 March 2016 [23 February 2016]. (原始内容存档于23 February 2016). 
  25. ^ Ha, Anthony. Chamath Palihapitiya Confirms That His Social+Capital Partnership Has Raised A New Fund Of $275M+. TechCrunch. 4 March 2013 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于24 April 2013). 
  26. ^ Grant, Rebecca. Making money and a difference, Social+Capital Partnership confirms new fund. VentureBeat. 4 March 2013 [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于23 May 2013). 
  27. ^ Palihapitiya, Chamath. What went wrong at Social Capital. Axios. 7 September 2018 [9 October 2020]. (原始内容存档于16 October 2020). 
  28. ^ LBO. Ex-Facebook exec Chamath Palihapitiya's venture firm is 'imploding': Report. Lanka Business Online. 10 September 2018 [14 October 2020]. (原始内容存档于16 July 2019) (美国英语). 
  29. ^ Primack, Dan. Chamath Palihapitiya burns down what he built. Axios. [14 October 2020]. (原始内容存档于5 March 2019) (英语). 
  30. ^ Primack, Dan. What went wrong at Social Capital. Axios. [11 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于16 October 2020) (英语). 
  31. ^ Primack, Dan. Chamath Palihapitiya burns down what he built. Axios. [2021-04-11]. (原始内容存档于2019-03-05) (英语). 
  32. ^ Ontario judge rules against Xtreme Labs co-founders, Chamath Palihapitiya in Tinder-focused lawsuit | BetaKit. 15 May 2019 [10 March 2021]. (原始内容存档于10 March 2021) (加拿大英语). 
  33. ^ MacMillan, Douglas. Tinder Hook Up Leads to a Lawsuit. Wall Street Journal. 11 March 2015 [10 March 2021]. ISSN 0099-9660. (原始内容存档于2 October 2019) (美国英语). 
  34. ^ Slack Appoints Former Flex CEO Mike McNamara to Its Board of Directors. www.businesswire.com (新闻稿). [21 December 2019]. (原始内容存档于21 December 2019). 
  35. ^ Zaveri, Paayal. Slack beat financial targets but didn't give an update to its daily user competition with Microsoft. Business Insider. [2021-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (美国英语). 
  36. ^ Slack Appoints Former Flex CEO Mike McNamara to Its Board of Directors. www.sec.gov. [2021-12-20]. (原始内容存档于20 December 2021). 
  37. ^ 'All Things Chamath': Palihapitiya Outlines His Vision. Bloomberg Front Row (Bloomberg). 12 February 2021 [12 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于2021-12-30). 
  38. ^ Ramkumar, Amrith. Chamath Palihapitiya's Social Capital Leads 20 Million Funding Round for Battery Startup. Bloomberg Front Row. 15 November 2021 [15 November 2021]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  39. ^ Fintech startup Spectral Finance raises funds from Chamath, Polychain. Bloomberg Reuters. 9 November 2021 [9 November 2021]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  40. ^ Bambysheva, Nina. Chamath Palihapitiya's Social Capital Co-Leads Investment In Solana-Based Startup Syndica. Forbes. 3 November 2021 [3 November 2021]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  41. ^ CFP, Matthew Frankel. Chamath Palihapitiya Just Filed for 7 More SPACs. The Motley Fool. 2021-02-17 [2021-06-11]. (原始内容存档于2022-10-19) (英语). 
  42. ^ Virgin Galactic dealmaker defies IPO lull with 720 million blank check deal. [10 June 2020]. (原始内容存档于10 June 2020). 
  43. ^ IPO 2.0 | Social Capital Hedosophia Holdings. www.socialcapitalhedosophiaholdings.com. [2021-06-11]. (原始内容存档于2022-09-24). 
  44. ^ Sheetz, Michael. Virgin Galactic drops 10% after chairman Chamath Palihapitiya dumps his $213 million personal stake. CNBC. 2021-03-05 [2021-06-08]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). 
  45. ^ Virgin Galactic Board of Directors. Virgin Galactic. 10 November 2021 [10 November 2021]. (原始内容存档于2023-05-05). 
  46. ^ Prang, Allison. You Can Now Sign Up to Go to Space With Virgin Galactic. Wall Street Journal. 2022-02-15 [2022-02-18]. ISSN 0099-9660. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (美国英语). 
  47. ^ OpenDoor to go public by way of Chamath Palihapitiya's SPAC. [15 September 2020]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-22). 
  48. ^ Franklin, Joshua; Sen, Anirban; Hu, Krystal. Online lender SoFi to go public through merger with Palihapitiya-backed SPAC. Reuters. 7 January 2021 [2022-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2021-02-03). 
  49. ^ Li, Yun. Chamath Palihapitiya to take Clover Health public in another SPAC deal worth $3.7 billion. CNBC. 6 October 2020 [28 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于25 January 2021). 
  50. ^ Powell, Jamie. Hindenberg takes aim at Chamath's Clover Health. www.ft.com. 4 February 2020 [4 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于4 February 2021). 
  51. ^ Clover Health: How the "King of SPACs" Lured Retail Investors Into a Broken Business Facing an Active, Undisclosed DOJ Investigation. Hindenburg Research. [6 April 2021]. (原始内容存档于2021-02-04). 
  52. ^ Ponciano, Jonathan. Chamath Palihapitiya's Clover Health Discloses New SEC Investigation And Responds To Short-Seller's Scathing Allegations. Forbes.com. [6 April 2021]. (原始内容存档于2022-12-26). 
  53. ^ Clover Health: How the "King of SPACs" Lured Retail Investors Into a Broken Business Facing an Active, Undisclosed DOJ Investigation. Hindenburg Research. 4 February 2021 [4 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于4 February 2021) (美国英语). 
  54. ^ Feiner, Lauren. Palihapitiya-backed Clover Health shares fall on critical report by short seller Hindenburg Research. CNBC. 4 February 2021 [4 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于4 February 2021) (英语). 
  55. ^ NJ State Commission of Investigation on CarePoint Health (PDF). (原始内容存档 (PDF)于4 February 2021). 
  56. ^ Reuter, Elise. NJ legislators call for probe of insurance unicorn. MedCity News. 19 February 2020 [4 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于2021-03-29) (美国英语). 
  57. ^ Aliaj, Ortenca. Clover Health under investigation by SEC after shortseller report. www.ft.com. [5 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于5 February 2021). 
  58. ^ Hindenburg Research Goes After 'Wall Street Celebrity Promoter' Chamath Palihapitiya. Institutional Investor. [5 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于5 February 2021) (英国英语). 
  59. ^ Jennings, Katie. Billionaire Clover Health CEO Vivek Garipalli's Expletive-Ridden Tirade. Forbes. [23 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于23 February 2021) (英语). 
  60. ^ Detrixhe, John. Fintech firms like SoFi and Robinhood offer "free" stock trading. What's the catch?. Quartz. [16 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于5 February 2021) (英语). 
  61. ^ Does SoFi have any ownership of APEX?. SoFi. [16 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于12 February 2021) (美国英语). 
  62. ^ Report: SoFi to acquire minority stake in Apex Clearing. www.spglobal.com. [16 February 2021]. (原始内容存档于2 February 2021) (美国英语). 
  63. ^ Coates, John. SPACs, IPOs and Liability Risk under the Securities Laws. SEC. [2022-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-05-04). 
  64. ^ Liability Risk in De-SPAC Transactions. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. [2021-11-03]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). 
  65. ^ Chamath Files 4 New Biotech SPACs. [2 June 2021]. (原始内容存档于3 June 2021). 
  66. ^ Singh, Maanvi. 'All you need is the filing fee and a dream': who are Gavin Newsom's recall challengers?. The Guardian. 2021-04-20 [2021-05-15]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). The former Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya, a big Democratic donor 
  67. ^ Shultz, Alex. Chamath Palihapitiya, who is very rich, wants you to believe he's on your side. He's not.. SFGate. 30 January 2021 [31 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于30 January 2021) (美国英语). 
  68. ^ 68.0 68.1 Garofoli, Joe. Silicon Valley billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya: would-be governor just for a moment. San Francisco Chronicle. 2021-02-04 [2021-10-01]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-20) (美国英语). 
  69. ^ Bowles, Nellie; Griffith, Erin. Silicon Valley Leaders' Plea to Democrats: Anyone but Sanders. The New York Times. 2020-03-02 [2021-10-01]. ISSN 0362-4331. (原始内容存档于2020-03-04) (美国英语). 
  70. ^ Kim, Eugene. Billionaire VC says he'll shut down his firm to help Mike Bloomberg win US presidency. Business Insider. [2021-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (美国英语). 
  71. ^ Our Supporters. FWD.us. [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于13 April 2013). 
  72. ^ About Us. FWD.us. [23 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于13 April 2013). 
  73. ^ Zuckerberg, Mark. Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg: Immigration and the knowledge economy. The Washington Post. 11 April 2013 [17 April 2013]. (原始内容存档于13 April 2013). 
  74. ^ DePillis, Lydia. Mark Zuckerberg's Cynical, Necessary Washington Strategy. The New Republic. 6 May 2013 [7 May 2013]. (原始内容存档于2 November 2013). 
  75. ^ Montgomery, Kevin. Ron Conway Flips Out Over Call for SF Mayor Ed Lee to Resign. Gawker. [2021-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-01-28) (英语). 
  76. ^ Ron Conway And Chamath Palihapitiya Debate SF Housing And Google At Next Big Thing Conference. TechCrunch. [2021-12-20] (美国英语). [失效链接]
  77. ^ Oremus, Will. Tech Conference Turns Into Shouting Match About Inequality in Silicon Valley. Slate. 9 June 2014 [9 July 2015]. (原始内容存档于11 July 2015). 
  78. ^ Garofoli, Joe. Ron Conway mocks fellow venture capitalist, uses phrase 'Palo Alto resident' as insult. San Francisco Chronicle. 9 June 2014 [9 July 2015]. (原始内容存档于10 July 2015). 
  79. ^ Buhr, Sarah. Ron Conway And Chamath Palihapitiya Debate SF Housing And Google At Next Big Thing Conference. TechCrunch. 9 June 2014 [9 July 2015]. (原始内容存档于11 July 2015). 
  80. ^ Kovach, Steve. Former Facebook exec feels 'tremendous guilt' for what he helped make. Business Insider. 11 December 2017 [29 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于4 January 2018). 
  81. ^ Wong, Julia Carrie. Former Facebook executive: social media is ripping society apart. The Guardian. December 12, 2017 [December 12, 2017]. (原始内容存档于December 12, 2017). 
  82. ^ Gilbert, Ben (December 15, 2017). "Former Facebook exec: I take back what I said about Facebook 'destroying how society works' — kinda" 互联网档案馆存档,存档日期2017-12-15.. Business Insider.
  83. ^ Palihapitiya, Chamath (December 15, 2017). (Untitled) 互联网档案馆存档,存档日期2019-01-31.. Facebook. (Account confirmed by Business Insider article.)
  84. ^ Recode Decode: Chamath Palihapitiya. Stitcher. 25 March 2020 [29 January 2021]. 
  85. ^ Franklin, Joshua. Investor Palihapitiya says he wants to be governor of California. Reuters. 26 January 2021 [29 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于28 January 2021) (英语). 
  86. ^ Primack, Dan. Venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya eyes run for California governor. Axios. 27 January 2021 [29 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于27 January 2021) (英语). 
  87. ^ 87.0 87.1 Bursztynsky, Jessica. Tech investor Chamath Palihapitiya says he's not running for California governor. CNBC. 3 February 2021 [27 March 2021]. (原始内容存档于4 February 2021) (英语). 
  88. ^ Chamath for Gov. www.chamathforca.com. [2021-08-29]. (原始内容存档于2023-04-29). 
  89. ^ Ford, Brody. Palihapitiya Angles for Newsom's Job as Tech Group Backs Recall. Bloomberg News. 26 January 2021 [29 January 2021]. (原始内容存档于26 January 2021) (英语). 
  90. ^ E63: Insurrection indictments, human rights in the US and abroad, groundbreaking MS study and more. YouTube. [January 18, 2022]. (原始内容存档于15 January 2022). 
  91. ^ 91.0 91.1 Warriors part-owner backtracks after saying he doesn’t care about Uyghur abuse. The Guardian. 2022-01-18 [2022-05-30]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). 
  92. ^ 92.0 92.1 Geraghty, Jim. Investor’s Uyghur Comments Are Even Worse Than You’ve Heard. National Review. 2022-01-18 [2022-05-30]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-08) (美国英语). 
  93. ^ Nuttall, Jeremy. Canadian billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya said 'nobody' cares about Uyghurs — but advocates say he might have helped the cause. Toronto Star. January 19, 2022 [22 January 2022]. (原始内容存档于19 January 2022). 
  94. ^ Do Uyghur Lives Matter to Americans?. The Atlantic. 19 January 2022 [2022-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07). 
  95. ^ 95.0 95.1 Keraghosian, Greg. Outcry after Dubs part-owner says 'nobody cares' about genocide. SFGate. 2022-01-18 [2022-01-18]. (原始内容存档于18 January 2022) (美国英语). 
  96. ^ Luce, Ivan De. The Warriors weren't even his first choice: Chamath Palihapitiya explains one of the most successful NBA investments of all time. Business of Business. 2021-01-19 [2021-05-15]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-27) (英语). 
  97. ^ Roose, Kevin. The Government Shutdown Has Revealed Silicon Valley's Dysfunction Fetish. Intelligencer. October 16, 2013 [2021-05-15]. (原始内容存档于2023-04-14) (美国英语). 
  98. ^ Backlash as US billionaire dismisses Uyghur abuse. BBC. January 19, 2022 [22 January 2022]. (原始内容存档于18 January 2022). 
  99. ^ The Warriors weren't even his first choice: Chamath Palihapitiya explains one of the most successful NBA investments of all time. The Business of Business. 20 Jan 2021 [9 July 2022]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-27). 
  100. ^ Waterloo Alumnus Donates $25 Million to Help Transform Education. [30 October 2018]. (原始内容存档于8 January 2022). 
  101. ^ Lin, Connie. Chamath Palihapitiya pledges $7 million to California hydropanels that pull water out of air. Fast Company. 2021-08-30 [2022-01-08]. (原始内容存档于2022-12-20) (美国英语). 
  102. ^ 102.0 102.1 Belvedere, Matthew J. My kids get 'no screen time whatsoever,' says Silicon Valley investor Chamath Palihapitiya. CNBC. 2017-12-12 [2021-04-11]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英语). 
  103. ^ Rusli, Evelyn M. In Flip-Flops and Jeans, An Unconventional Venture Capitalist. DealBook. 6 October 2011 [2021-04-11]. (原始内容存档于2013-05-07) (英语). 
  104. ^ 104.0 104.1 Chamath Palihapitiya Still Lives Four Minutes From His Ex-Wife. Market Realist. [2021-04-11]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-23) (美国英语). 
  105. ^ Celarier, Michelle. The Unusual Ambitions of Chamath Palihapitiya. Institutional Investor. May 31, 2020 [2021-05-15]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英国英语). 
  106. ^ Primack, Dan. What went wrong at Social Capital. Axios. [2021-06-11]. (原始内容存档于2020-10-16) (英语). 
  107. ^ The Unusual Ambitions of Chamath Palihapitiya. Institutional Investor. [2021-12-20]. (原始内容存档于2023-03-07) (英国英语). 
  108. ^ Chamath Palihapitiya: Cash Out. [22 February 2016]. (原始内容存档于8 March 2016). 
  109. ^ 42nd World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2011 United States. [22 February 2016]. (原始内容存档于28 February 2016). 
  110. ^ Faux, Zeke. The SPAC King Is Doing Just Fine Even as the Bubble Starts to Burst. Bloomberg News. May 13, 2020 [July 15, 2021]. (原始内容存档于13 May 2021). 

外部链接