Tech investor Jason Calacanis is offering $100,000 each to seven tech teams and he’ll host them in a 12-week incubator if they’ll just come up with a better alternative to Facebook.
The offer, known as the Open Book Challenge, promises to fund “seven purpose-driven teams that want to build a billion-user social network to replace Facebook — while protecting consumer privacy.”
Calacanis is the co-founder of Weblogs Inc., a blog network that he started in 2003 with an investment from Mark Cuban and sold to AOL in 2005 for $30 million. Calacanis had an earlier media enterprise that didn’t work out as well. He turned down a $20 million offer for his Silicon Alley Reporter just before the dotcom bubble burst. Calacanis “sold the magazine for next to nothing, and then got fired,” according to Business Insider.
Calacanis is perhaps best known for his rebound. He wrote about it in a 2017 book, “Angel: How to invest in technology startups —Timeless advice from an Angel Investor who turned $100,000 into $100,000,000.”
Most of Calacanis’ money has been made by angel investing. He was an early investor in Uber.
The Open Book challenge is not an idea or business plan competition, according to its home page. “We are looking for teams that can actually build a replacement, and we will be judging teams primarily based on their ability to execute,” the website says.
“We want to invest in replacements that don’t manipulate people and that protect our democracy from bad actors looking to spread misinformation.”
Calacanis admitted that people love Facebook and Instagram, and that both are ingrained in people’s lives, but he has been a vocal critic, criticising Facebook for its “complete and utter failure of leadership” amid the privacy scandal, CNBC reported.
Facebook is under fire and its stock took a nosedive after reports that conservative research firm Cambridge Analytica gained access to data from 50 million Facebook profiles before the 2016 presidential election.
Zuckerberg has been “MIA,” Calacanis said. “It’s a complete and utter failure of leadership,” he said on “Closing Bell.”
So far, no one has been able to come close to Facebook’s scale — not for lack of trying.
A relaunched MySpace couldn’t bring people back, Mashable reported. Google tried for so very long. Ello, a minimalist social network that received a flurry of signups in 2014, is now more of a Pinterest-style site for sharing art and photography.”
For some investors, Facebook’s vulnerability could represent an opportunity for something new.
https://twitter.com/Jason/status/976249105792958465
Building a better FB is a terrible idea. We cannot solve a problem by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created it. The point of evolution is to make new mistakes, not to repeat the ones of the past.
— Michael (@MMosiuc) March 21, 2018
https://twitter.com/MatterFact923/status/976277391302709249
A billion user social network? Did that 10 years ago.
Doing it for $100k? You're having a laugh. pic.twitter.com/UwDQ8EJz5e— Kevin Marks (@kevinmarks) March 22, 2018
https://twitter.com/admoprotocol/status/976699772785647616
https://twitter.com/sull/status/976696079185072129
https://twitter.com/handlemodet/status/976457533853335552
Yeah, a distributed ledger system based, with all data encrypted based on @hashgraph tech. All communications available for users and in a open-source platform were users can verify the algorithms options, and the storage is not controlled by the Corp..
— Dr Isaque Eberhardt (@isaquedanielre) March 21, 2018
Facebook serves so many functions. Which is the most important one or 2 you want to be solved?
— Andre (@dre7413) March 21, 2018
not sure i can beat the cat in this…
— Carlos Arbona (@CarlosArbona) March 21, 2018