
Hatching Twitter
A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal
Panoramica di Hatching Twitter
Behind Twitter's iconic blue bird lies a tale of friendship, betrayal, and billion-dollar power struggles. Mark Zuckerberg called it "a clown car into a gold mine" - the perfect description of how four founders turned chaos into a platform that revolutionized global communication.
Temi chiave in Hatching Twitter
- silicon valley power struggles
- corporate betrayal
- social media evolution
- founder dynamics
- accidental innovation
Citazioni da Hatching Twitter
Twitter helped topple dictatorships, its founders orchestrated coups against each other.
Technology connecting us can tear apart even its creators.
Technology should facilitate natural human interaction rather than replace it.
Meaningful work and friendship [are prioritized] over financial gain.
The platform that connected 330 million users worldwide was built on broken friendships.
Personaggi di Hatching Twitter
- Noah GlassCo-founder who emphasized the human element
- Biz StoneCreative talent focused on community building
- Ev WilliamsCo-founder with a track record in tech platforms
- Nick BiltonAuthor and New York Times technology columnist
Sull'autore
Sull'autore di Hatching Twitter
Nick Bilton is the New York Times-bestselling author of Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal, a British-American journalist renowned for his incisive chronicles of technology’s human dramas. Specializing in narratives that dissect ambition, innovation, and corporate intrigue, Bilton draws from his decade-long tenure as a New York Times technology columnist and current role as a Vanity Fair special correspondent.
His expertise in Silicon Valley’s inner workings informs this gripping account of Twitter’s turbulent origins, which blends investigative rigor with cinematic pacing to explore themes of loyalty, leadership, and digital disruption.
Bilton’s other acclaimed works include American Kingpin, a true-crime exploration of the dark web, and the HBO documentary Fake Famous, which he wrote and directed. A multi-platform storyteller, he’s currently adapting his investigative work into a Martin Scorsese-directed film starring Leonardo DiCaprio.
Praised by The Wall Street Journal as “a master of the modern business narrative,” Bilton’s books have become essential reading in tech and entrepreneurship circles. Hatching Twitter has been cited in over 40 academic publications and inspired multiple screen adaptations, cementing its status as a defining account of social media’s formative years.
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FAQ su questo libro
Hatching Twitter chronicles the turbulent founding of Twitter, detailing how co-founders Evan Williams, Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone, and Noah Glass clashed over vision and control. Nick Bilton reveals explosive power struggles, betrayals, and Silicon Valley’s cutthroat culture, while exploring Twitter’s accidental rise into a global communication tool that reshaped politics and activism.
This book suits entrepreneurs, tech enthusiasts, and readers fascinated by startup drama. It offers insights into leadership failures, team dynamics, and the human cost of innovation. Those interested in social media’s societal impact or Silicon Valley’s behind-the-scenes chaos will find it compelling.
Yes. Bilton’s investigative rigor and novel-like narrative make it a page-turner. With firsthand accounts of boardroom coups and personal vendettas, it’s essential for understanding how visionary ideas can unravel due to ego—and how Twitter became a cultural force despite itself.
- Power corrupts friendships: Co-founders’ camaraderie dissolved into bitter rivalries, exemplified by Dorsey’s ousting and Glass’s erasure from Twitter’s origin story.
- Vision vs. execution: Endless debates over Twitter’s purpose (e.g., “What’s happening?” vs. “What are you doing?”) stalled progress.
- Accidental impact: Features like hashtags and retweets emerged from user behavior, not corporate strategy.
The battle for CEO control dominated Twitter’s early years. Dorsey’s indecisiveness, Williams’ resentment of investors, and Glass’s emotional volatility created a leadership vacuum. Dorsey’s eventual return as CEO in 2015 marked a contentious climax to years of infighting.
Bilton exposes a toxic blend of ambition and insecurity, where venture capital pressures exacerbate founder conflicts. The narrative critiques the “fake it till you make it” ethos, showing how Twitter’s team often prioritized perception over product stability.
- “It’s not about the idea—it’s about the execution.” – Reflects Dorsey and Williams’ clashes over Twitter’s direction.
- “Noah gave Twitter its soul, and then he was erased.” – Highlights Glass’s overlooked contributions.
Some accuse Bilton of sensationalizing disputes, relying on anonymous sources, and downplaying technical challenges. Former employees argue the book overemphasizes drama at the expense of Twitter’s engineering milestones.
Unlike The Social Network (Facebook) or Elon Musk’s biography, Bilton focuses on interpersonal collapse rather than product genius. It aligns closer to Bad Blood in exposing founder toxicity, but with a more ambiguous moral lens.
The metaphor underscores Twitter’s chaotic birth: an imperfect team “hatching” a world-changing platform through serendipity and strife. It also nods to Silicon Valley’s tendency to mythologize startup origin stories.
Ev Williams insisted the prompt shift from “What are you doing?” to “What’s happening?”—a pivotal change that reframed Twitter as a news hub rather than a status-update tool. This sparked internal debates about the platform’s identity.
As Twitter (now X) grapples with content moderation and free speech debates, Bilton’s account provides context for its foundational instability. The book remains a cautionary tale about scaling technology without resolving cultural fractures.

















