'In the right place at the right time'Although Google's motto is "don't be evil Please [improve the article] or discuss this issue on the talk page. ", the setting couldn't more closely resemble a Bond villain's lair. Amid rolling Hertfordshire countryside, a country house hotel is playing host to the company's Zeitgeist conference. Inside, shifty-looking men in dark suits whisper into their sleeves as they co-ordinate the arrival of luminaries including Gordon Brown and Queen Rania of Jordan. Journalists are not allowed to walk around unaccompanied un·ac·com·pa·nied adj. 1. Going or acting without companions or a companion: unaccompanied children on a flight. 2. Music Performed or scored without accompaniment. . And everything is decked out in the obligatory upmarket up·mar·ket adj. Appealing to or designed for high-income consumers; upscale: "He turned up in well-cut clothes . . . and upmarket felt hats" New Yorker. dotcom dressing - predominantly white, with the odd discreet Google logo Google has had several logos since its renaming from "BackRub". The current official Google logo was designed by Ruth Kedar, and is a logotype based on the Catull typeface. . Free smoothies and Green & Black's chocolate are available. Only Google would go to so much trouble to gather business executives from around the world in one place to talk global economics and green issues, when almost all of them look as though they'd rather be staring at their PCs and munching munching - Exploration of security holes of someone else's computer for thrills, notoriety or to annoy the system manager. Compare cracker. See also hacked off. pizza. The YouTube founder and chief executive, Chad Hurley Chad Meredith Hurley (born 1977) is co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of the popular San Bruno, California-based video sharing website YouTube, one of the biggest providers of videos on the Internet. In June 2006, he was voted 28th on Business 2.0's "50 people who matter" list. , is the exception - polite, down-to-earth and diffident but no stereotypical geek A technically oriented person. It has typically implied a "nerdy" or "weird" personality, someone with limited social skills who likes to tinker with scientific or high-tech projects. The origin of the term dates back to the late 1800s. . Dressed casually but stylishly, he has a slightly earnest manner that betrays the fact that the next 12 months are crucial for YouTube, which was formed just over three years ago and sold to Google 21 months later for $1.65bn. Either it will capitalise on its position as the leading video website on the internet, or it will be remembered as nothing more than a transitional footnote. Hurley, who has a worrying tendency to drift into corporate argot ar·got n. A specialized vocabulary or set of idioms used by a particular group: thieves' argot. See Synonyms at dialect. [French. , is convinced it will be the former. His ambition is for YouTube.com to become a global "super distribution hub" - the means by which video content is distributed globally on PCs, mobile phones or TVs. The other big question is whether he and his co-founder, Steve Chen, both worth hundreds of millions of dollars before they turned 30, will stick around to make it happen. "It's been a great relationship with Google. It has given us the freedom to continue to focus on users and create a product that would work for them and keep them engaged," enthuses Hurley. "It's also given us time to really work on the advertising opportunities that are going to work not only for the online community, but for advertisers and partners as well." He is acutely aware that the site has to start making serious money. And, with lawsuits from MTV-owner Viacom, the FA Premier League and Elvis Presley's estate looming, this will also be the year in which YouTube either solves its copyright and licensing issues for good or is sunk by them. Sponsorship deals Having developed a thriving, vibrant community - and defied those naysayerswho said it would implode To link component pieces to a major assembly. It may also refer to compressing data using a particular technique. Contrast with explode. under the pressure of lawsuits and users drifting off in search of the next online fad - the next step is to make money out of them. Put simply, the site must bring in enough cash to satisfy its new licensing deals, pay out to some of its most popular users under a scheme that allows them to share its revenues, and still contribute to Google's bottom line. "They've given us a lot of independence. We've kept separate offices, they really push us to make our own decisions. We've been able to launch in 20 different countries since the acquisition and scale the infrastructure around the world," says Hurley. YouTube's phenomenal growth shows no sign of slowing - 10 hours of video are uploaded every minute and hundreds of millions of videos are viewed every day. But now Google is eyeing it to deliver the next stage. That will mean more contextual advertising Contextual advertising is the term applied to advertisements appearing on websites or other media, such as content displayed in mobile phones, where the advertisements are selected and served by automated systems based on the content displayed by the user. around videos, but also more clever pop-up video Pop-Up Video is a popular VH1 television show that "popped up" bubbles ( "What people miss in the broader strategy of how we work into Google's plans is that we see a great opportunity for people to elevate or promote individual video content," he says. "We're going to give people the tools and the ability to promote a single video against our video catalogue search in the same way as they do in Google." Just as YouTube has levelled the playing field in content, he claims, so it will provide revenue streams not only for the big media players but also for nascent talent. "All the tools are going to allow everyone to participate. If you're an independent film-maker, you have just as much chance to promote your content as the traditional studios." A happy alignment of different stars, such as widespread broadband and cheap camera-phones, made YouTube's phenomenal growth possible. It exploded thanks to the kind of silly user-generated content The production of content by the general public rather than by paid professionals and experts in the field. Mostly available on the Web via blogs and wikis, user-generated content refers to material such as the daily news, encyclopedias and other references, movie and product reviews as played ad nauseum to baffled broadcasting industry executives in 2006 (teenagers lip-synching to pop hits, exploding bottles of Diet Coke Diet Coke (sometimes known as Diet Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola Light or Coke Light) is a sugar-free soft drink produced and distributed by The Coca-Cola Company. , etc), and a huge library of archive clips on just about any subject you could think of. Now, insists Hurley, we are seeing those who have grown up with the YouTube revolution - video bloggers, independent film-makers, comedians - using it to bypass traditional broadcasters altogether and becoming much more sophisticated in their contributions. "People are starting to understand that - in terms of what the power of video can provide and the scale and the global footprint the YouTube service can provide. That's what sets us apart from our competitors." Contrary to some predictions, its audience continues to grow. The latest figures from Nielsen Online Nielsen Online is an Internet media and market research firm that conducts studies of Ad Relevance and Ad Intelligence, in addition to Internet Audience Measurement. It is made up of the combination of Nielsen//NetRatings and Nielsen BuzzMetrics, which merged in early October 2007 show it had 11.6 million unique users in the UK during April, a 46% rise on last year. One of YouTube's best early moves was to allow its videos to appear throughout the web, on blogs and rival sites. Now Hurley says he wants to take that further, using its technology to power other websites and opening it up to developers. The vast majority of traditional media companies, he argues, have come round to the value of YouTube. Once they realised they were not necessarily in competition with it and could use the site to reach audiences they couldn't get to elsewhere, they have become far more enthusiastic about its potential, he says. The BBC BBC in full British Broadcasting Corp. Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927. , for example, is using YouTube to drive viewers to its iPlayer. But there are still those significant hurdles. YouTube's business model relies on leaving it to copyright-owners to identify their own material, making use of fingerprinting technology and other tools to take it down if they want it removed. If that is successfully challenged, it could fatally undermine the site. He expresses some frustration at those who won't play ball. It's "kind of ironic" that they are not going after YouTube's rivals, he says, claiming they are not making similar efforts to help identify unlicensed content. Tabloid headlines He treads more carefully when it comes to YouTube's unsavoury offerings. Happy-slapping, glorifying gang culture, cyber-bullying - there isn't a week that goes by without YouTube content being called to account by tabloid headlines. "Whenever you're the leader in any industry, you get more headlines. The majority of the content on the site is appropriate," he insists. "We've been around a little more than three years and we've learned a lot in that time." It is not just broadcasters who see YouTube as a route to an audience who are otherwise difficult to reach. On the day we meet, Gordon Brown has become the latest politician to join the YouTube club, awkwardly asking for questions on his new channel. Meanwhile, in the US, the looming presidential contest will be the first YouTube election. "People want to see something authentic. If it's too polished and highly produced, people might not trust it as much," Hurley says. "If it's grainy grain·y adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est 1. Made of or resembling grain; granular. 2. Resembling the grain of wood. 3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion. , if it's coming from a webcam, if it's someone standing there and talking their mind or sharing their thoughts, people trust it much more." When asked about his personal fortune, Hurley reminds me that he and Chen went through the same experience at PayPal. When it was bought by eBay in 2002 for $1.54bn, the pair walked away with more than enough to invest in their next venture. "We weren't the founders of that company, but we were there, and we got the benefit of seeing it succeed. We were surrounded by a lot of people in a similar situation. Whether it's [Google founders] Larry or Sergey or other people like Mark Zuckerberg Mark Elliot Zuckerberg (born May 14, 1984) is an American computer programmer and entrepreneur. As a Harvard College student he founded the online social networking website Facebook with the help of fellow Harvard student and computer science major Andrew McCollum as well as [Facebook], these people are basically friends. We're all coming from these simple ideas. We were all really lucky to be in the right place at the right time." Hurley is either incredibly lucky or very talented. Most likely, a bit of both. At university he ditched computer science for graphic design. And it is his ability to straddle In the stock and commodity markets, a strategy in options contracts consisting of an equal number of put options and call options on the same underlying share, index, or commodity future. the worlds of technology, media and marketing that perhaps explains his success. He and Chen will stay at YouTube for a good while yet, he says, insisting it's his passion for the business, not filthy lucre Noun 1. filthy lucre - shameful profit; "he would sell his soul for filthy lucre" net income, net profit, profit, profits, earnings, lucre, net - the excess of revenues over outlays in a given period of time (including depreciation and other non-cash expenses) , that keeps him motivated. "We're not sticking around because we need to. Financially, we could leave whenever we want. But it is seeing this vision through, having a chance to define some of these ideas and these markets. That's what is really driving us." Curriculum vitae curriculum vitae CV, resume Medical practice A formal listing of a person's professional education, objectives, work history, including location and dates of service at a particular hospital, health care facility, university, the role filled at the time of service, Age 31 Education Twin Valley High School, Elverson, Pennsylvania Elverson is a borough in Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 959 at the 2000 census. The Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site is located near Elverson. ; Indiana University of Pennsylvania History IUP was founded in 1875 as a normal school by investors in Indiana County. It followed the mold of the French Ecole Normale. When it opened its doors it enrolled just 225 students. Career 2002-04 User interface designer, PayPal 2005 Consultant for several technology companies. Co-founds YouTube 2006 Founders sell YouTube to Google for $1.65bn
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