National Post

A tech boss riding a geopolitic­al storm

Zoom’s Yuan caught in U.s.-china spat

- Richard Waters The Financial Times

TECHNOLOGY

Few people have been made as wealthy by the coronaviru­s crisis as Eric Yuan.

As the founder and chief executive of Zoom, the app that has become synonymous with video conferenci­ng for the socially distanced multitudes, Yuan has enjoyed what can only be described as an embarrassm­ent of riches. This week, the value of his personal stake in the company he founded nine years ago rose above US$ 10 billion for the first time, vaulting him into the rarefied ranks of Silicon Valley’s deca-billionair­es.

So it is a relief to see that he can still make the same kind of amateur mistake as the most tech-befuddled beginner. On a conference with Wall Street this week to announce his company’s latest earnings, the 50-year-old forgot to un-mute himself, leading to the kind of pantomime that has been played out on screens around the world during the crisis. Investors still got the message, lifting Zoom’s shares to new heights.

With as many as 300 million meeting participan­ts each day at the peak in April, the crisis has thrust Yuan into the limelight, capping his rise as a rare Chinese- born leader of a hit Silicon Valley startup. But it has also exposed his company to scrutiny and brought an outcry over security and privacy lapses.

Despite the large number of Chinese- born engineers who keep Silicon Valley humming, few have become bosses of prominent local tech companies. Yuan was born in China’s eastern province of Shandong and trained in mathematic­s and computer science, before moving to the United States in the 1990s to become an engineer at conferenci­ng service Webex. After it was acquired by Cisco, a career inside the networking equipment giant beckoned. Only when Cisco refused to back his idea for a simple app designed for the new world of smartphone­s did he quit to build it himself.

Yuan’s emergence as Silicon Valley’s most prominent new Chinese- American business leader has come at a time of rising tension between the U. S. and China, with technology markets a key source of friction. To add to his discomfort, nearly one- third of Zoom’s workforce is based in China — the sort of arrangemen­t that was once natural for an aspiring global company, but which now can seem a liability.

After the pandemic made Zoom a household name, there followed what Yuan has denounced as “dishearten­ing rumours and misinforma­tion” — questions about his own loyalties, and suspicions about whether the foothold in China has made Zoom an outpost for state-sponsored spying. Last month, he issued a statement declaring his own American identity — he became a citizen in 2007 — and underlinin­g Zoom’s roots in the U.S.

After a recent trip to China, he told acquaintan­ces he now feels more at home in the U. S., says Santi Subotovsky, one of Zoom’s early venture capital backers. “His kids were born and raised here, he identifies with this culture,” Subotovsky says. “He’s been here so long — but his accent doesn’t go away.”

His personal interests could be those of a business executive anywhere. Family time is paramount, basketball a passion. He names the late star Kobe Bryant, the player ( and Zoom investor) Andre Iguodala, and outspoken entreprene­ur and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban as his heroes. He says he devours business books in search of tips for how to run his own company better.

He clearly feels uncomforta­ble about the geopolitic­al cross- currents he has been caught in. In an interview with the Financial Times last year, he predicted that mutual self- interest would prevail between the U. S. and China, ensuring a future in which the two economies stay closely interconne­cted. That looks increasing­ly unlikely now.

If his Chinese roots have been a source of controvers­y, Zoom’s popularity has brought other forms of unwanted attention. “Zoom- bombing” — the infiltrati­on and disruption of private meetings — is the latest addition to the lexicon of online misbehavio­ur. A spate of software glitches added to the problems. Bruce Schneier, a cyber security expert, called the company’s security arrangemen­ts “at best sloppy, and malicious at worst”. Politician­s piled on and a review by regulators in the U.S. followed.

The security crisis brought out what Yuan’s supporters say are his best qualities. High among them is humility. Yuan says his attitude since arriving in the U.S. has been shaped by his father’s advice on what it takes to succeed in a new country: “hard work and stay humble.” One researcher who pointed out a flaw in Zoom’s software said he swiftly received a personal email from the boss thanking him for finding the glitch.

“He’s an out-in-front leader, he doesn’t hide from controvers­y,” said Carl Eschenbach, another of the company’s venture capital investors and a board member. That has included Yuan publicly taking the blame for the lapses — as he did again this week.

The decision to put everything else on hold while Zoom fixed the problems highlights a determinat­ion that supporters say is also a strength. “He’s not going to give up,” says Subotovsky.

Even after the hard lessons he has been through this year, Yuan still sometimes struggles to bridge the worlds of business software, where Zoom has its roots, and the wider consumer market it has been thrust into. This week he caused a minor stir by saying that he did not intend to offer endto- end encryption — the gold standard in security — to Zoom’s consumer users, since that would prevent him co- operating with law enforcemen­t.

It was another self-inflicted wound to overcome. But after his precipitou­s rise this year, no one is likely to count Yuan and his ubiquitous video app out quite yet.

been here so long — but his accent doesn’t go away.

 ?? Victor J. Blue / Bloo mberg ?? Founder and CEO of Zoom Eric Yuan is a rare Chinese-born leader of a hit Silicon Valley startup. With lockdowns, he and his firm have been thrust into the spotlight.
Victor J. Blue / Bloo mberg Founder and CEO of Zoom Eric Yuan is a rare Chinese-born leader of a hit Silicon Valley startup. With lockdowns, he and his firm have been thrust into the spotlight.
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