Welcome to our collection of quotes by Sean Parker. We hope you enjoy pondering them and please share widely.
Wikipedia Summary for Sean Parker
Sean Parker (born December 3, 1979) is an American entrepreneur and philanthropist, most notable for co-founding the file-sharing computer service Napster, and serving as the first president of the social networking website Facebook. He also co-founded Plaxo, Causes, Airtime.com, and Brigade, an online platform for civic engagement. He is the founder and chairman of the Parker Foundation, which focuses on life sciences, global public health, and civic engagement. On the Forbes 2016 list of the world's billionaires, he was ranked No. 722 with a net worth of US$2.4 billion.
You start to accumulate your library of music. You want that music everywhere -- that's the point where we monetize. If you want portability, mobility, and access, then you buy it.
Solving specific problems is what drives me. I am not interested in having a career. I never have been.
There's a lot of artists whose contracts are written in such a way that they do not get paid for what's happening on streaming services.
It's never the end game. Facebook is now a platform upon which all kinds of applications are being built it's definitely not it.
The transition strategies are more important than understanding what the outcome state will be.
I think being a wealthy member of the establishment is the antithesis of cool. Being a countercultural revolutionary is cool. So to the extent that you've made a billion dollars, you've probably become uncool.
Your biggest challenge as an entrepreneur is not concealing your idea from others or keeping your idea a secret, it is actually convincing people that you're not crazy and that you can pull this off.
I think Facebook's biggest problem is the glut of information that Facebook's power users are overwhelmed with.
Facebook is such a basic utility. It's something that is such a part of peoples' lives, I think it's hard to imagine it going away.
It's not cool. I think being a wealthy member of the establishment is the antithesis of cool. Being a countercultural revolutionary is cool. So to the extent that you've made a billion dollars, you've probably become uncool.
In truth the social media elements of the Obama campaign, while extremely innovative, did not produce a lot of results.
Ever since Napster I've dreamt of building a product similar to Spotify.
Spotify is returning a huge amount of money. We'll overtake iTunes in terms of what we bring to the record industry in under two years.
There's definitely some sort of dissent brewing between labels, publishing companies and artists. A lot of it has to do with older licensing schemes.
A million dollars isn't cool. You know what's cool? A billion dollars.
Little startups are ridiculously overfunded.
The market is ridiculously overcrowded with early stage investors. This results in a talent drain, where the best talent gets diffused and work for their own startups.
Look: There's good creepy and there's bad creepy. Today's creepy is tomorrow's necessity.
I can sort of do what I want. Maybe I have to work harder to prove myself in some new relationship because they've heard some wacky stories about me. But at least I can get the meeting.
Facebook isn't helping you make new connections, Facebook doesn't develop new relationships, Facebook is just trying to be the most accurate model of your social graph. There's a part of me that feels somewhat bored by all of this.
If there's some triumphant end of the story, I guess in a roundabout way I've gotten what I wanted, which is the ability to do interesting things and the wealth to be free.
I lived on couches for something like six months. I had no home. I was totally broke. I would stay at a friend's house for two weeks, then move because I didn't want to become this permanent mooch.
It would be incredibly presumptuous and self-serving of me to believe that Facebook was the end of history. The only way it could possibly be the end of history is if it becomes some sort of artificial super intelligence that takes over the world.
You can now be a master of your own destiny. I'm not sure why you would sign up with a record label.
Start-up teams are always in flux, so, like all start-ups, we're always talking to candidates for various key roles.
It seems like the right thing to do is tackle problems other people aren't working on.
I suffer from the delusion that every product of my imagination is not only possible, but always on the cusp of becoming real.
At the end of the day, money is just a proxy for votes. That is what makes politics so vulnerable to social media.
I've been doing a hybrid of investing and entrepreneurship, which I think initially I wasn't set out to do. But I realized it fit my personality.
I think the perception of wealth and power is that things just become easier and easier when in reality as you raise the stakes things become more stressful.
What comes after the revolution is inevitably bureaucracy. Whoever wins the revolution builds a bureaucracy.
One of the difficulties in living the lifestyle I lead is that it is hard to get my friends in one place.
Look -- There's good creepy and there's bad creepy. Today's creepy is tomorrow's necessity.
At every point I am besieged by people who would like me to conform to some social norm of whatever sort of social group they expect me to be a part of. I never have any identification with these social groups.
You want people using your product because it's a part of your life, then they can't stop using it.
You actually don't want people thinking your product is cool, because then you're a fad.
Running a start-up is like eating glass. You just start to like the taste of your own blood.
I definitely wanted to earn my freedom. But the primary motivation wasn't making money, but making an impact.
Part of the challenge of being an entrepreneur, if you're going for a really huge opportunity, is trying to find problems that aren't quite on the radar yet and try to solve those.
Gray hats are the ones who think they're doing good, but they're not. You learn that when the FBI shows up on your doorstep.
There is no simple answer to what I think.
I had a desire to prove to myself that I was actually in control -- that I wasn't a puppet.
You just keep pushing yourself harder and harder to achieve more and more -- I don't think it's ever quite as glamorous as it appears on the outside.