Greg Yuchang Tseng (born November 14, 1979) is a Taiwanese-born American Internet entrepreneur. He is co-founder and current CEO of social networking website Tagged[1] and was CEO of JumpStart Technologies, LLC.[2]
Tseng is an avid runner and has completed several road marathons and trail ultramarathons.[10]
Scientist
From 1997 to 2004, Tseng was an active researcher in nanotechnology at The MITRE Corporation, Harvard University, and Stanford University. At MITRE,[11] he co-authored a Science journal article entitled "Toward Nanocomputers".[12] At Harvard, he earned an A.B. in Chemistry & Physics & Mathematics in 2001 and co-authored a Science perspective entitled "Carbon Nanotube-Based Nonvolatile Random Access Memory for Molecular Computing"[13] which is the technology behind the company Nantero. At Stanford, he conducted research in the Goldhaber-Gordon group.[14] He was pursuing a Ph.D. in Physics under a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship.
Entrepreneur
At Harvard, Tseng was director of the Harvard Entrepreneurs Club (HEC) from 1998 to 2000,[15] and co-wrote The Harvard Entrepreneurs Club Guide to Starting Your Own Business (Wiley, 1999).[16] In the fall semester of 1999, Tseng and two classmates launched flyingchickens.com, a price comparison shopping engine for Harvard textbooks.[17] In the spring semester of 2000, flyingchickens.com was merged with Limespot.com and the textbook shopping service was revamped[18] and expanded to over 80 college campuses.[19] In late 2000, Tseng and three other college entrepreneurs were interviewed and featured in The New York Times[20] and Fast Company.[21] While at Harvard, Tseng also co-founded Jumpstart Technologies with longtime friend and business partner Johann Schleier-Smith. Jumpstart was an incubator of Internet businesses including online matchmaker CrushLink and social networking site hi5. In October 2004, Tseng and Johann Schleier-Smith co-founded Tagged, and were both named by BusinessWeek as one of Tech's Best Young Entrepreneurs.[22] They jointly received a U.S. patent for their invention "User created tags for online social networking"[23] which has led to over 200,000 user-created tags on Tagged.[24] As of July 2014[update], Tseng is CEO of Tagged[1] and advises several other Silicon Valley startup companies.[5]
At first Tagged[1] was a site meant for just teenagers but Tseng realized that he wanted to expand and help the business grow. He expanded his demographic to those who were 13 years old up in all countries. In 2007, he decided to change Tagged's business model and evolve into a social network site that allows you to meet new people and he called it "social discovery"[25]
Two of Tseng's companies, Jumpstart and Tagged, have been criticized for their alleged misuse of commercial email and have been the subject of legal action.[26][27] In 2006, Jumpstart Technologies settled with the Federal Trade Commission on alleged violations of the CAN-SPAM Act which included a $900,000 fine but no admission of guilt. The FTC alleged that "in its FreeFlixTix promotion, Jumpstart violated the law by disguising its commercial e-mails as personal messages, and by misleading consumers as to the terms and conditions of the promotion" and stated "Deceptive subject lines and headers not only violate the CAN-SPAM Act, but also consumer trust."[26] Between April and June 2009, Tagged sent tens of millions of spam emails that falsely stated that a contact sent photographs to the recipient. State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo announced his intention to sue Tagged for "deceptive email marketing and invasion of privacy".[28][29] Tagged paid or agreed to pay separate settlements of $250,000, $500,000, and $650,000 relating to these practises.[30]
Additionally, in 2002, Salon.com published a negative review of Jumpstart's CrushLink website. CrushLink was alleged to harvest e-mail addresses for later use in spam e-mail in exchange for deceptively offering the name of a "crush" that in the vast majority of cases did not exist.[31]
^Katharine Mieszkowski (August 7, 2002). "The bot who loved me". Salon.com. p. 3. Archived from the original on September 13, 2009. Retrieved October 22, 2009.