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Mythbusting: Craig Newmark, filthy rich on eBay’s millionsJuly 26th, 2007 at 6:07 pmSource:Valleywag
Desperate to protect his ownership in Craigslist, Knowlton got in touch with people at eBay, who struck a deal for their employer to acquire his stake. Publications as august as Fortune have reported this as a straightforward sale, without Craigslist’s consent. Here’s what Adam Lashinsky wrote in 2005: The transaction only occurred because Newmark had given a quarter-share to an employee, Phillip Knowlton…. As for the money eBay shelled out, that went to Knowlton, not Craigslist. I know Lashinsky, who’s a good reporter, and can only conclude that a source — likely one close to Craigslist — led him astray. Because both of those statements are false, according to my sources. (Thanks to valleygurl for the tip left in the comments.) So what actually happened? eBay, my sources tell me, agreed to pay an amount around $16 million to Knowlton, and an equal amount to Craigslist, bringing the total paid by eBay to more than $30 million. The company, in turn, immediately paid out that $16 million sum as a dividend to Newmark and Buckmaster, according to their stakes in the company. Buckmaster reportedly holds 40 percent, with Newmark owning the rest, which would suggest Buckmaster got about $6 million and Newmark $10 million. And those amounts, in turn, are dwarfed, insiders believe, by the amounts Newmark and Buckmaster take out of the company in salaries and other forms of pay. With only around 20 employees and an estimated $150 million in revenues, Craigslist is widely thought to be staggeringly profitable. Remember this whenever you see Craig Newmark pull his “I’m-just-a-customer-service-rep” act. Remember this when Buckmaster says Craigslist only cares about its customers. Because, like the rest of Silicon Valley, they’re all about the money. Unlike the rest of you, they’re just better at hiding it.
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