Amidst international upheaval in the
wake of the United Kingdom's vote to leave the European Union, President Barack
Obama spent the day at Stanford University praising the entrepreneurial
community at the 2016 Global
Entrepreneurship Summit alongside
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
"The
world needs your creativity and your energy and your vision," he said in
his opening remarks. "You're going to be what helps this process of global
integration work in a way that works for everyone and not just some. I believe
we are better off in a world where we are trading and networking and
communicating and sharing ideas. That also means that cultures are colliding
and sometimes that's disruptive and people get worried. You're the bridge.
You're the glue."
Zuckerberg
was joined on the panel by Mai Medhat, the Egyptian co-founder of
Eventtus, a mobile platform to help organize
events; Jean Bosco Nzeyimana, the
Rwandan
co-founder and CEO of Habona Limited, a startup that takes biological
waste
and turns it into environmentally friendly fuel products; and Mariana Costa
Checa,
the Peruvian founder of Laboratoria, a company dedicated to training young
women
to code and connecting them with career opportunities.
Obama
asked Zuckerberg if he views Facebook's role as one that creates a
platform
for entrepreneurs around the world, to which the 32-year-old CEO
replied
"to me, entrepreneurship is about creating change, not just creating
companies."
Zuckerberg said that when he started
Facebook, his mission was to give every person a voice and bring communities
together -- and he said that has been a consistent throughline of the company's
work, especially in its initiative to equip countries and regions that do not
have access to the internet with stronger connectivity.
"It’s
not something that we'll make money from for a very long period of time, if it
works out. But it's this deep belief that you're trying to make a change,
you're trying to connect people in the world, and I really do believe if you do
something good and you help people out, then eventually some portion of that
good will come back to you," he said. "I hope that the work that we
do can play a role in empowering so many entrepreneurs to build great
companies."
source:here

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