Parker cofounded file-sharing service Napster in 1999, when he was only 19 years old. Napster became one of the fastest growing businesses of all time, as well as one of the most controversial. Parker and his cofounder, Shawn Fanning, are often credited with revolutionizing the music industry.
After several law suits from music associations eventually shut down Napster, Parker went on to found a social networking site called Plaxo. He was ousted two years later.
Parker joined the Facebook team in 2004, when it was just a fledgling college startup. As the social network's founding president, he would play a huge role in the site's early investments, design, and transition into a viable company.
Facebook Embed:
https://www.facebook.com/aaron/posts/photo.php?fbid=521569892603&set=a.515081260873.31.1208381&type=1
Post by: Aaron Sittig
In 2005, Parker was arrested on allegations of cocaine possession. Though official charges were never filed, the incident contributed, at least in part, to his eventual departure from Facebook.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThough he stepped down just a few months later, Parker continued to play a role in Facebook's growth.
Parker was played by Justin Timberlake in the 2010 Facebook movie "The Social Network." Parker was upset by his portrayal as a party boy, saying that Timberlake's character was a morally reprehensible human being" and that the movie was "a complete work of fiction."
Parker became a Managing Partner at Peter Thiel's Founders Fund in 2006. In his time since leaving Facebook, he has also helped bring Spotify to the US and founded political engagement startup Brigade Media.
He's been busy spending his massive personal fortune as well. In 2011, he paid $20 million for a West Village townhouse known as the "Bacchus House" for its party-animal past. Parker had previously been renting the house for $45,000 a month, in addition to the apartment he owns in San Francisco.
The Daily Mail reported that Parker and then-fiancee Alexandra Lenas were permanent residents of New York City's ritzy Plaza Hotel while their new three-story townhouse was being renovated.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdParker and Lenas were married in the summer of 2013, in a $4.5-million, 3-day ceremony in the woods of Big Sur, California. All 364 guests — including Jack Dorsey, Mark Pincus, Dustin Moskovitz, and Chris Hughes — were given Tolkien-esque costumes made by "Lord of the Rings" designer Ngila Dickson to wear during the ceremony. Parker ended up paying an extra $1 million in a settlement with the California Coastal Commission for failing to obtain the proper permits for the event.
Last summer, the couple added another property to their portfolio: a nine-bedroom Los Angeles mansion called "The Brody House," which they bought from Ellen DeGeneres for $55 million.
Parker often dresses in fine suits by top designers like Tom Ford and Dior.
He's no stranger to private jet travel, as shown in this Facebook post by Spotify artist-in-residence D.A. Wallach.
Facebook Embed:
https://www.facebook.com/DavidAndrewWallach/posts/photo.php?fbid=985550751231&set=a.985540067641.2436158.2194&type=1
Post by: D.A. Wallach
He keeps a $100,000 Tesla Model S in Los Angeles.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdHe keeps an Audi S5 in San Francisco.
But Parker is also a philanthropist — in June, he donated $600 million to launch the Parker Foundation, which will focus on funding programs in life sciences, global public health, and civic engagement. He recently pledged $24 million to develop the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy Research at Stanford. He also donated $4.5 million to support a malaria elimination program at the University of California San Francisco’s Global Health Group.
He’s one of the most generous people I know," a colleague told Vanity Fair in 2010. "Also one of the flakiest.