| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
organization
Facebook
|
Professional |
6
|
1 | |
|
person
Ian Osborne
|
Professional network |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Ian Osborne
|
Professional |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013-01-09 | N/A | Lecture published: 'How we put Facebook on the path to 1 billion users' | Udemy / YouTube | View |
| 2013-01-09 | N/A | Udemy Growth Hacking: An Introduction lecture published | YouTube (Digital) | View |
| 2013-01-09 | N/A | Lecture by Chamath Palihapitiya titled 'How we put Facebook on the path to 1 billion users' | Udemy / YouTube | View |
This document appears to be a biographical guest list or contact sheet, marked with a House Oversight Committee footer (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017587). It details high-profile individuals from technology, politics, and finance, including executives from Facebook, Microsoft, and Wordpress, as well as former government officials like Robert Rubin and aides to the Clintons and Bush administration. The list provides current roles and past affiliations for each individual.
This document is a page from a contact or attendee list (labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013487) containing biographical summaries of high-profile individuals in technology, finance, politics, and academia. Notable figures include Robert Rubin (former Treasury Secretary), General Stan McChrystal, and various tech CEOs and venture capitalists. The document outlines their current roles, former positions, and board memberships, likely prepared for a conference or networking event circa 2011-2013.
Ian Osborne forwards an invitation for the 'Dialog 2014' retreat to Jeffrey Epstein. The original invitation, sent by Auren Hoffman and signed by Peter Thiel, invites Osborne to a bipartisan retreat in Utah nominated by Chamath Palihapitiya. Osborne expresses cynicism to Epstein, claiming Peter Thiel doesn't actually attend these events and that he intends to tell Thiel to stop allowing his name to be used.
This document appears to be page 161 from a book or academic text discussing network theory, 'power law distributed' systems, and the growth strategies of tech giants like Facebook (specifically the 'seven friends in ten days' metric). It references works by Chamath Palihapitiya, Brian Arthur, and Albert-Lazlo Barabási. While labeled with a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation cache, the text itself discusses sociological and economic theories behind social media dominance rather than specific criminal activities.
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