Close

LOGIN

Remember me
Not a member?
or
Connect using:
Why BS?

We encourage visitors to register on Business Standard. Registering on the site is absolutely Free and offers you the following benefits.

Free Daily E-newsletter

Breaking News Alerts in your Inbox

Post Comments and Share your Feedback

Your Personal Business Standard Page

Free Portfolio of Stocks, Equity and Commodities Derivatives

Access Premium Services

Receive Selective Offers from our Third Party Premium Advertisers

Get Invited to Business Standard Events

Close

FORGOT PASSWORD?

Not a member?

Twins lose bid to reopen FB case

Related News

A federal appeals court in San Francisco denied the ’ plea for a new hearing.

Tyler and , the Olympic rowers and identical twins, who accused Inc and founder of stealing their idea for the social networking website lost their bid to have a US court void a multi-million dollar settlement of their claims.

The twins failed to convince the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to reconsider its April 11 ruling upholding the $65 million cash-and-stock settlement they reached with Facebook in 2008.

The brothers had complained the settlement was fraudulent because Facebook hid information from them. They also said they should have received more Facebook stock.

Without providing a reason, the court declined to have an 11-judge panel review the original ruling, which had been made by a three-judge panel.

Jerome Falk, a lawyer for the brothers, said in a statement that he plans to appeal to the .

Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said in an email that the company was pleased with the court’s decision.

The brothers were classmates of Zuckerberg at Harvard University and are rowers who competed in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Their feud with Zuckerberg was dramatised in the 2010 film .

A revised accord could enable the Winklevosses to benefit from Facebook's rising market value, which private investors have said in recent weeks might top $70 billion.

But in his April ruling, Chief Judge Alex Kozinski had called the brothers “sophisticated parties” who, with a team of lawyers and a financial adviser, had reached a “quite favourable” settlement.

In a separate lawsuit, New York businessman Paul Ceglia is claiming he had a contract with Zuckerberg that entitles him to 84 per cent of Facebook.

Read more on:   
|
|
|
|
|
|

Read More

Rogue websites grow by 600%

Four out of five e-mails received are spam, quarter of a million spam e-mails are sent out per hour, 85% of legitimate website have malicious ...

Back to Top

Quick Links

Back to Top