World War
Uber was founded by Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp in the bottom of the recession in March 2009. Garrett had moved to San Francisco from Canada in 2006 after getting funding for his venture StumbleUpon from Ram Shriram. I had met Garrett and his co-founder within a month of their move and was pitching a browser-based instant messenger as part of their web recommendation engine. Garrett’s Uber co-founder Travis had dropped out of college in California in 1998 to start a company called Scour with his classmates. Scour let users search and exchange multimedia content using a Napster-like peer-to-peer file sharing application. After Napster was deemed illegal and brought down by the music industry, Scour was deemed illegal too. Like Napster, Scour had to file for bankruptcy to protect itself from a lawsuit. Travis and Napster co-founder Sean Parker were good friends. Legend has it that after the fateful dinner where Parker met the Facebook founders for the first time, the dinner where Rakesh could have been, Sean hung out with Travis in a bar in New York. After Scour, Travis had started another peer-to-peer file sharing company called Red Swoosh that was eventually bought by Akamai for $19 million in 2007. Uber’s founders were repeat entrepreneurs from the Internet wave and the globalization wave. They ended up creating the company that defined the on-demand economy for the world in the smartphone wave. I was star-struck when I accidentally saw Travis in the corridors of Uber’s San Francisco headquarters in April 2015 while visiting a friend.