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Wayne Chang
Wayne Chang (born August 3, 1983) is an American entrepreneur. He is best known for founding Crashlytics that, in a little over a year, was acquired by Twitter for over $100 million in 2013 (later valued at $259.5 million at Twitter's IPO), creating i2hub, a popular filesharing network, and his lawsuit against the Winklevoss brothers, famously depicted in The Social Network movie. ==Personal life== Chang wrote his first software program on the Apple IIe at age 7. He was involved with the original Napster, the first peer-to-peer filesharing platform, while he attended high school in Haverhill, Massachusetts. In 2005, Newsweek profiled Chang for his abilities in technology. According to Chang's LinkedIn profile, he has worked on projects such as Dropbox, LanCraft, MyAdvantange, TetriNET, Nestea2, Q.U.B.E., Tribes 2, Gibbed.net, Q30wnerz, Instant Profiler, Dorm2Dorm. Chang also founded the Scene Review News Network, a site ranked 367 by Alexa. In 1999, Chang was a Security Consultant for AllAdvantage. In 2002, he was a Director at Pacific Northwest Software. In 2007, he founded Boylston Technology Group. Chang also served on the Board of Directors for non-profit organization Community Dispute Settlement Center. In 2011, Chang co-founded Crashlytics, a mobile company building crash reporting for iOS and Android, with Jeff Seibert. Crashlytics raised $1 million. In April 2012, Crashlytics raised an additional $5 million. In January, 2013, Crashlytics was acquired by Twitter for over $100 million. In November 2013, due to Twitter's IPO, the deal was valued at about $259.5 million.
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