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facebook

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 14:55

Mark Zuckerberg
February 3 near Palo Alto, CA, United States
Today is Facebook's 10th anniversary.

It's been an amazing journey so far, and I'm so grateful to be a part of it. It's rare to be able to touch so many people's lives, and I try to remind myself to make the most of every day and have the biggest impact I can.

People often ask if I always knew that Facebook would become what it is today. No way.

I remember getting pizza with my friends one night in college shortly after opening Facebook. I told them I was excited to help connect our school community, but one day someone needed to connect the whole world.

I always thought this was important -- giving people the power to share and stay connected, empowering people to build their own communities themselves.

When I reflect on the last 10 years, one question I ask myself is: why were we the ones to build this? We were just students. We had way fewer resources than big companies. If they had focused on this problem, they could have done it.

The only answer I can think of is: we just cared more.

While some doubted that connecting the world was actually important, we were building. While others doubted that this would be sustainable, you were forming lasting connections.

We just cared more about connecting the world than anyone else. And we still do today.

That's why I'm even more excited about the next ten years than the last. The first ten years were about bootstrapping this network. Now we have the resources to help people across the world solve even bigger and more important problems.

Today, only one-third of the world's population has access to the internet. In the next decade, we have the opportunity and the responsibility to connect the other two-thirds.

Today, social networks are mostly about sharing moments. In the next decade, they'll also help you answer questions and solve complex problems.

Today, we have only a few ways to share our experiences. In the next decade, technology will enable us to create many more ways to capture and communicate new kinds of experiences.

It's been amazing to see how all of you have used our tools to build a real community. You've shared the happy moments and the painful ones. You've started new families, and kept spread out families connected. You've created new services and built small businesses. You've helped each other in so many ways.

I'm so grateful to be able to help build these tools for you. I feel a deep responsibility to make the most of my time here and serve you the best I can.

Thank you for letting me be a part of this journey.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 16:17

Mark Zuckerberg
Even the name sounds Jewish.

Hell, he IS Jewish.
http://jewishornot.blogspot.nl/2012/05/is-mark-zuckerberg-jewish.html

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 17:19

Facebook is shit for neurotypicals.
Why did you bother pasting that shit here?

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 19:39

Let's wait warmly for the ">>3 lol ur such an autist XD i bet you don't like memes LMAAAOOO LONELY FUCK PATHETIC XD i'm posting on /prog/ but i'm not a loser rofl" response.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 20:26

>>4
I for one wait warmly for you to make proper posts and stop engaging in ``ironic memeposting''.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 20:52

>>5
That would be meta-ironic shitposting, as it's ironically parodying an usual ironic response to >>3-san's post. Sorry about the post, retard-kun is lurking.

Either way, this thread is shit.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 21:40

>>6
im not a retard nigger fagg

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-05 21:46

How about not shitposting at all?

Name: >>6 2014-02-05 23:00

>>8
I agree.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-06 13:39

>>8
Where do you think we are?

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-06 17:36

>>10
What's with the amount of /g/-level shitposting in here recently?

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-06 19:09

>>11
The /g/ shitposter seems to get really active after getting any kind of attention.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-06 22:36

>>12
are you referring to me ? i have been reading /prog/ since about 2010, but i only discovered /g/ in late 2012. you are making incorrect assumptions. that's business with .NET

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-07 2:41

>>13
Who the fuck are you and why do you keep popping up when anyone says the words "/g/", "retard" or "shitposter"? I wasn't talking about you.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-07 18:46

>>13
i've been making lots of thread recently, including this one and the microsoft one and the javascript one and the "sites not a shit" one and maybe some others, and i just thought you were angry at my threads because i'm the OP of this one.

sorry about everything.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-08 14:54

>>15
You are fine, keep making threads and contributing.

Name: Anonymous 2014-02-08 21:24

>>15
Disregard >>16. I hate your threads and wish ill upon you.

Don't change these.
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