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"Not every company can become a Google, but a Google can come from any incredibly wealthy, well-connected, elite nepo baby."



> but a Google can come from any incredibly wealthy, well-connected, elite nepo baby

A math teacher and researcher's son, a middle class immigrant from third world Soviet Russia.

Or: the middle class son of a professor of computer science and an instructor of programming.

Such privilege. /s

"Elite nepo baby" applies to anyone that ever accomplishes anything these days huh.


Quoting Jim Koen:

"His dad wasn't "just" a computer scientist, he was a professor for computer science and artificial intelligence at Michigan State. Sergey Brin's father was equally a professor in mathematics at the University of Maryland. > It's obvious in retrospect that this was a great idea for a startup. It wasn't obvious at the time. It may not have been obvious, but the decision was damn well near as engineered with data as it could be. They also were _insanely_ well connected through their and their parents academic career. Both Sergey and Larry had obtained their PhD prior to starting the company. I can also remember reading that they obtained significant amounts of funding through connections Larry's dad had into the industry. You can ignore the rest of my comment, what follows is just my take. Their success story is imo one of the most blatant examples on how privilege really does give you a boost in life. I am not arguing that anyone could have done it, but I do wonder how the world would look like if we were all kids of academics with a successful career, with a relatively safe, secure and stable childhood home and a family background that really incentivizes learning and academic success over succumbing to the pressure of, you know, having an income at some point."




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