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'''Esther Dyson''', is a former Chairman of the [[ICANN Board]], the [[EFF|Electronic Frontier Foundation]], and her own [[EDventure Holdings]].<ref>[http://www.edventure.com/new-bio.html EDventure Bio]</ref>
'''Esther Dyson''', is a former Chairman of the [[ICANN Board]], the [[EFF|Electronic Frontier Foundation]], and her own [[EDventure Holdings]].<ref>[http://www.edventure.com/new-bio.html EDventure Bio]</ref>
She currently has holdings in a variety of online ventures and is a board member for some of these companies. Many of her projects are based in Russia.<ref>[http://www.edventure.com/new-bio.html EDventure]</ref>
She currently has holdings in a variety of online ventures and is a board member for some of these companies. Some of her projects are based in Russia, where she has been spending an increasing amount of time; she is also interested in investing in and traveling around other emerging markets in East Asia and Africa.<ref>[http://www.edventure.com/new-bio.html EDventure]</ref>


Esther Dyson was appointed as one of [[ICANN]]'s nine initial directors in October 1998. She served as an ICANN director until November, 2000.
Esther Dyson was appointed as one of [[ICANN]]'s nine initial directors in October 1998. She served as an ICANN director until November, 2000.

Revision as of 22:20, 26 August 2011

Country: USA
Email: edyson [at] boxbe.com
Website:

   [EDventure EDventure]

Twitter:    @edyson

Esther Dyson, is a former Chairman of the ICANN Board, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and her own EDventure Holdings.[1] She currently has holdings in a variety of online ventures and is a board member for some of these companies. Some of her projects are based in Russia, where she has been spending an increasing amount of time; she is also interested in investing in and traveling around other emerging markets in East Asia and Africa.[2]

Esther Dyson was appointed as one of ICANN's nine initial directors in October 1998. She served as an ICANN director until November, 2000.

Ms. Dyson sold her company, EDventure to CNet in 2004,[3] and worked for CNet until 2006.[4]Ms. Dyson has since reclaimed the name EDventure Holdings for her business endeavors. Her investments include Flickr and del.icio.us, both sold to Yahoo!, and Medstory, which was sold to Microsoft;[5] she was involved in all of those sales.[6]

She speaks Russian in addition to her native English.[7]

Memberships

She is a member of the President's Export Council Subcommittee on Encryption and sits on the boards of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Scala Business Solutions, Poland Online, Cygnus Solution, E-Pub Services, Trustworks (Amsterdam), IBS (Moscow), iCat, New World Publishing and the Global Business Network. She is on the advisory boards of Perot Systems and the Internet Capital Group, and a limited partner of the Mayfield Software Fund.

She is also actively involved in Air/Space 2.0, The Flight School workshop, and several non-profit foundations. Esther Dyson is a member of the NASA Advisory Council and Chairman of its Technology and Innovation Committee.[8]

Executive & Board Appointments

Ms. Dyson is also on the boards and executive committees of the Santa Fe Institute and the Institute for East-West Studies, and on the board of the Eurasia Foundation. She is a founding member of the Russian Software Market Association and a member of the Software Publishers Association. She serves on the advisory boards of The Software Entrepreneurs Forum (Silicon Valley), thePoynter Institute for Media Studies, the Russian Internet Technology Center, and the Soros Medical Internet Project.[9]

She is a board member for the following non-listed start-ups:[10]

  • Boxbe (US)
  • Evernote (US)
  • 23andMe (US)
  • Airship Ventures (US)
  • Eventful.com (US)
  • Meetup Inc. (US)
  • NewspaperDirect (Canada)
  • Voxiva (US)
  • Yandex (Russia)

Other Background

Ms. Dyson holds a Bachelor's degree in economics from Harvard University (1972).

Previously, she was a securities analyst at New Court Securities, 1977-80; Oppenheimer & Co.; 1980-82; and a reporter for Forbes magazine, 1974-77.

References