SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) ― Facebook cofounder Mark Zuckerberg announced Tuesday he is
a dad and pledged to give away his fortune to make the world a “better place”
for baby daughter Maxima and others.
In a letter to Maxima posted on his
Facebook page, Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan said they were going to give
away 99 percent of their company shares ― estimated value $45 billion ― during
their lives in an effort to make a happy and healthy world.
Max Chan
Zuckerberg is held by her parents, Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan
Zuckerberg. (AP-Yonhap)
“Max, we love you
and feel a great responsibility to leave the world a better place for you and
all children. We wish you a life filled with the same love, hope and joy you
give us. We can’t wait to see what you bring to this world,” the letter
said.
Zuckerberg will “gift or otherwise direct” nearly all his shares of
Facebook stock, or the after-tax proceeds of sales of shares, to further a
mission of “advancing human potential and promoting equality” by means of
activities for the public good, the California-based social network said in a
filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Zuckerberg
“intends to retain his majority voting position in our stock for the foreseeable
future,” Facebook said in the SEC filing.
“As you begin the next
generation of the Chan Zuckerberg family, we also begin the Chan Zuckerberg
Initiative to join people across the world to advance human potential and
promote equality for all children in the next generation,” the Facebook chief
and his wife said.
“Our initial areas of focus will be personalized
learning, curing disease, connecting people and building strong
communities.”
Zuckerberg early on added his name to those who have taken
a Giving Pledge to dedicate the majority of their wealth to
philanthropy.
“My hat’s off to Mark Zuckerberg for making a decision
he’ll never regret and making a difference he’ll forever be remembered for,”
pledge-signer and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in an online
post.
“The traditional approach to giving ― leaving it to old age or
death ― is falling by the wayside, as it should. Mark’s decision shows that when
it comes to philanthropy, 30 is the new 70.”
Zuckerberg is 31 years old,
while Bloomberg is 73.
Names on the pledge include Microsoft cofounder
Bill Gates, Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg, Oracle billionaire
Larry Ellison and IAC/InterActiveCorp powerhouse Barry Diller.
“We
believe all lives have equal value, and that includes the many more people who
will live in future generations than live today,” Zuckerberg and Chan said in
their letter to Max.
“Our society has an obligation to invest now to
improve the lives of all those coming into this world, not just those already
here.”
Zuckerberg in November said that he and his wife are donating $20
million to help get high-speed Internet service to U.S. classrooms.
The
money is being given to nonprofit group Education Super Highway to help with its
mission, the Facebook chief executive said in a post on his page at the social
network.
A month earlier, Zuckerberg and his doctor wife revealed plans
to start a private school in a hardscrabble Silicon Valley town, mixing
education with health care.
Zuckerberg voiced pride in his wife,
Priscilla, for the plan to create “The Primary School” in the working-class city
of East Palo Alto.
Last year, Zuckerberg and Chan began pumping $120
million into San Francisco Bay Area schools.
More than five years ago,
Zuckerberg channeled $100 million to improve schools in the New Jersey city of
Newark in an early foray into improving public education that got failing
grades.
Zuckerberg plans to take two months’ paternity leave to be a
dad.
“Studies show that when working parents take time to be with their
newborns, outcomes are better for the children and families,” Zuckerberg said in
an earlier post on his Facebook page.
Beginning with the New Year, dads
working full-time for Facebook anywhere in the world will have the option of
taking four months’ paid leave.
All new dads working for Facebook outside
the U.S. currently get a minimum of four weeks’ paternity leave, with more time
offered in locations where required by local law, according to
Facebook.
Same-sex partners who are not primary caregivers for babies get
the same paid leave time as dads, the social network said.
The change,
effective Jan. 1, essentially raises parental leave time for dads and
noncustodial same-sex partners from four weeks to four months.
Maternity
leave offered to Facebook employees around the world is already four months, and
the benefit was available to both moms and dads in the United
States.
Facebook also gives a $4,000 bonus for parents to help meet the
needs of new babies.
첫댓글1. After reading this article, how did it make you feel? 2. Have you donated money to someone or some fundation? If you have, tell us your experience. If you haven't why not? 3. When you have children in the future, do you have any ideal the way of bringing up children?(e.g., education, habit and so on) 4. who do you admire the most and why?
첫댓글 1. After reading this article, how did it make you feel?
2. Have you donated money to someone or some fundation? If you have, tell us your experience. If you haven't why not?
3. When you have children in the future, do you have any ideal the way of bringing up children?(e.g., education, habit and so on)
4. who do you admire the most and why?