^ "Can Tech Make Work Email More Efficient?".^ a b "Insider Perspectives: Ex-Googler Justin Rosenstein on Making the Jump to Facebook" Inside Facebook, July 9, 2007.^ "After IPO, Facebook Gets Serious About Making Money".^ "Asana Leadership - Meet Our Leaders".^ "Asana: Dustin and Justin's Quest for Flow".Rosenstein has committed to giving away most of his wealth to philanthropic causes in his lifetime, inspired by The Giving Pledge. Additionally, he owns about 16.2% of Asana, valued around $680 million based on a $4 billion valuation for the company. While working at Facebook, Rosenstein was compensated with about 4.863 million Class B shares, worth about $1.46 billion at $300/share. Rosenstein lives in a cooperative living space in San Francisco's Mission District, called Agape. We're seeing corporations using powerful artificial intelligence to outsmart us and figure out how to pull our attention toward the things they want us to look at, rather than the things that are most consistent with our goals and our values and our lives." Personal life And so, we're seeing the results of that. We are more profitable to a corporation if we're spending time staring at a screen, staring at an ad, than if we're spending that time living our life in a rich way. What's frightening, and what hopefully is the last straw that will make us wake up as a civilization to how flawed this theory has been in the first place, is to see that now we're the tree, we're the whale. This has been affecting the environment for a long time. This is short-term thinking based on this religion of profit at all costs, as if somehow, magically, each corporation acting in its selfish interest is going to produce the best result. For so long as our economy works in that way and corporations go unregulated, they're going to continue to destroy trees, to kill whales, to mine the earth, and to continue to pull oil out of the ground, even though we know it is destroying the planet and we know that it's going to leave a worse world for future generations. "We live in a world in which a tree is worth more, financially, dead than alive, in a world in which a whale is worth more dead than alive. Rosenstein starred in the documentary drama The Social Dilemma, which examines the impact of extended time spent on social networking platforms and raises the alarm on the importance of tackling problems such as addiction, fake news, and global warming. In 2014, he delivered the keynote address at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in New York, about using technology for social good as part of “one human project for global thriving.” The Social Dilemma Rosenstein is the founder of a nonprofit organization called One Project. He has published opinions on building effective collaborative software in Wired, leadership strategy and enterprise software design in Fast Company, and entrepreneurship in TechCrunch, and productivity in TIME. On its website, Asana states its mission is to “help humanity thrive by enabling all teams to work together effortlessly.” He is a frequent speaker on issues of business and technology. In October 2008, Rosenstein left Facebook to co-found the collaborative software company Asana along with Moskovitz. He was technical lead in charge of Facebook's Pages, the Facebook Like button, and Facebook Beacon. In May 2007, Rosenstein left Google to become an engineering lead at Facebook, working closely with Mark Zuckerberg and Dustin Moskovitz. He also created and wrote the original prototype for Gmail Chat and many of the features in Google’s rich text editor. His projects initially included Google Page Creator, the precursor to Google Sites, and a project internally codenamed “Platypus,” which eventually became Google Drive. At Google, Rosenstein led projects in Google's communication and collaboration division. Rosenstein dropped out of a graduate program in computer science at Stanford in 2004 to join Google as a product manager. As an undergraduate, he served as a member of the Mayfield Fellows Program. He matriculated to Stanford University, and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics at age 20. He was a successful high school Lincoln–Douglas debater. Rosenstein grew up in San Francisco Bay Area and attended The College Preparatory School in Oakland, California.
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