
Ilya Zhitomirskiy
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) -- Ilya Zhitomirskiy, a co-founder of the startup social networking site Diaspora that put an emphasis on privacy and user-control, has died, a company spokesman said Monday. He was 22.
The
cause of Zhitomirskiy's death in San Francisco wasn't immediately
known, and neither the company nor the San Francisco Medical Examiner's
office would release details.
"Ilya was a great guy. He was a
visionary, he was a co-founder of a company that hopes to bring a better
social networking experience," said Peter Schurman, a Diaspora
spokesman. "We are all very sad that he is gone. It is a huge loss for
all of us, including his family. "Zhitomirskiy was one of four
students who started Diaspora in a computer lab at New York University. As
an anti-Facebook of sorts, the group raised more than $200,000 by
collecting contributions through the website Kickstarter.
Last
month, it posted a blog on its website asking for more contributions.
The
site champions the idea of sharing while keeping control. On its
website, the company promotes itself as a "fun and creative community
that puts you in control. "In a video posted on Vimeo in April
2010, when Diaspora first went looking for funds, Zhitomirskiy describes
his vision.
"No longer will you be at the whims of those large
corporate networks who want to tell you that sharing and privacy are
mutually exclusive," Zhitomirskiy said alongside co-founders Raphael
Sofaer, Dan Grippi, and Max Salzber. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
is listed as a supporter. He told Wired.com in May 2010 after Facebook
announced new privacy controls that he liked the open source project. "I
think it is cool people are trying to do it. I see a little of myself
in them," he said.
According to Zhitomirskiy's profile on
Diaspora, he's "super passionate about building a world of hacker
spaces, maker culture, sharing, cycling, and life satisfaction. "In
a September 2010 interview with New York Magazine, Zhitomirskiy said he
wanted social network users to migrate to websites that were more
transparent about privacy policies.
Zhitomirskiy said he and his
co-founders didn't set out to make money when they created Diaspora but
to instead provide an "open platform" for users. "There's
something deeper than making money off stuff," Zhitomirskiy said. "Being
a part of creating stuff for the universe is awesome."
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