Mark Zuckerberg is in the top 10 accounts at Facebook, but is not the first.
At the original site, 2004, members could be made only by Harvard University students, and then the site expanded to Columbia and Stanford universities. Since September of 2005, high school students have been able to participate, and later allowed to create an account for all adults and then for those over 13 years.
As strange as his founder seems Facebook Mark Zuckerberg he didn't have the first bill, because the first three accounts were used for testing, so Zuckerberg is at No. 4 and they follow:
His co-founders, the Chris Hughes at five and Dustin Moscovitz at six. Chris Hughes was the first to take on the position of a representative of the company, abandoned his position to contribute to Barak Obama's online election campaign, 2008.
Dustin Moskovitz "was a workaholic and a 'machine,'" Zuckerberg said of the Facebook co-founder. Moskovitz left Facebook in 2008 to work on its implementation Asana.
It goes to seventh position Arie Hasit, the first non-founder of Facebook, and a roommate of Zuckerberg. After graduating from Harvard, Hasit moved to Israel, where he is studying to become a rabbi, while also working for NOAM, a conservative youth group.
Next Facebook member, at least those who are still up to date, was Andrew McCollum, who met Zuckerberg and Moskovitz the summer after their sophomore year. McCollum was the creator of the original Facebook symbol which was a teenage girl picture by Al Pacino.
Ten (without counting trial accounts) are filled in Colin Kelly, Mark Kaganovich, Andrei Boros, Manuel Antonio Aguilar and Zach Bercu.