Caterina Fake
Caterina Fake | |
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Caterina Fake (January 2008)
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Born | 1969/1970 (age 54–55)[1] Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Alma mater | Vassar College (1991) |
Occupation | entrepreneur, businesswoman |
Known for | co-founder of Flickr and Hunch |
Spouse(s) | Stewart Butterfield (2001–2007) |
Caterina Fake (born 1969 or 1970)[citation needed] [1] is an American entrepreneur and businesswoman. She co-founded the websites Flickr and Hunch.[2][3]
Contents
Early life and education
Fake was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,[4] to an American father, and a Filipina mother who is a naturalized citizen.[5][6] As a child, she was not allowed to watch television, and her hobbies included reading poetry and playing classical music.[7]
Fake graduated from Choate Rosemary Hall and attended Smith College. In 1991 she graduated from Vassar College with a B.A. degree in English.[4][8]
Career
She started her career as a Lead Designer of Organic Online, a top web development agency, where she worked on web sites for Fortune 500 companies such as McDonald's, Kimberly-Clark, Colgate-Palmolive, Levi's and Nike - many of them their first online ventures. She served as a Member of the Research Staff at Interval Research.[9]
In the 1990s, Fake was Art Director at Salon.com, and heavily involved in the development of online community, social software and personal publishing.[10] In 1997, she took a job managing the community forums of Netscape.[6]
In the summer of 2002, she co-founded Ludicorp in Vancouver with Stewart Butterfield and Jason Classon.[11][12] The company developed a massively multiplayer online role-playing game called Game Neverending. The game did not launch, but Fake and Butterfield started a new product called Flickr that became one of the world's most popular photosharing websites. Flickr was acquired by Yahoo! in 2005. Flickr became part of a vanguard of so-called Web 2.0 sites, integrating features such as social networking, community open APIs, tagging, and algorithms that surfaced the most popular content. After the acquisition, Fake took a job at Yahoo!, where she ran the Technology Development group, known for its Hack Yahoo! program and for Brickhouse, a rapid development environment for new products. Fake resigned from Yahoo on June 13, 2008.[13]
In 2009, Fake co-founded the website Hunch with entrepreneur Chris Dixon. The site made recommendations to users based on the tastes and opinions that they entered into the system. It launched in June 2009.[14] Hunch was acquired by eBay for a reported $80 million in November 2011.[15] eBay shut it down in March 2014.
Fake's most recent venture is Findery, which was originally called Pinwheel, and launched in a limited beta in February 2012.[6][16] It was renamed to Findery in July 2012.[17] The company is headquartered in San Francisco.[18]
Memberships
Fake joined the board of directors of Creative Commons in August 2008,[19] and is Chairman of the Board of Etsy. She is a Founder Partner at Founder Collective, and advises many startups and new businesses.
Awards and honors
Fake has won many awards, including BusinessWeek's Best Leaders of 2005,[20] Forbes 2005 eGang, Fast Company's Fast 50, and Red Herring's 20 Entrepreneurs under 35. In 2006, she was named to the Time 100, Time Magazine's list of the world's 100 most influential people, appearing on the cover of Newsweek that same year.
In May 2009 she received an Honorary Doctorate from the Rhode Island School of Design.[4]
Personal life
Fake was married to Stewart Butterfield, her Flickr co-founder, from 2001[21] to 2007.[6] They had one daughter together, in 2007.[22] As of 2015, Fake is in a relationship with Jaiku co-founder Jyri Engeström, and the couple has three children between them.[7]
Fake currently lives in San Francisco, California and New York City.
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caterina Fake. |
- The New Wisdom of the Web (Newsweek)
- Yahoo Taps Its Inner Startup (Business Week)
- Caterina Fake Web Links
- Caterina Fake IMNO Interview
- Wired Profile
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from September 2014
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- Living people
- American women chief executives
- American corporate directors
- American businesspeople of Filipino descent
- American technology company founders
- Businesspeople from California
- Businesspeople from New York City
- Businesspeople from Pennsylvania
- Businesspeople in information technology
- Choate Rosemary Hall alumni
- People from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Smith College alumni
- Vassar College alumni
- Women in technology
- Members of the Creative Commons Board of Directors
- Canadian technology company founders
- Women company founders
- Businesspeople from Vancouver
- American technology chief executives
- Year of birth uncertain