Back in March 2014,Lady Moon (2010) Full Movie Online Facebook announced it acquired Oculus, the "leader in immersive virtual reality technology, for a total of approximately $2 billion."
Turns out that was fake news — or maybe just a poorly written lede.
SEE ALSO: How Oculus could revive the 3D-printing revolution that never happenedFacebook did acquire Oculus, but the price tag was much larger than previously stated and widely reported. The realization came after the attorney for video game maker ZeniMax Media (which is suing Facebook for allegedly stealing the intellectual property) directly asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in court testimony Tuesday.
Facebook paid $2 billion for the company plus an additional $700 million to retain employees and $300 million for earn-out, he said. That brings the total cost to bring Oculus under the Facebook umbrella as $3 billion.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Facebook stated in its own press release at the time that the company issued $400 million in cash, common stock valued at $1.6 billion and $300 million earn-out. With those numbers, the press and Facebook continuously low-balled the "approximately $2 billion," and simply neglected a cool $700 million.
Oculus had approximately 75 employees at the time of the acquisition.
Even with the new price tag, Oculus is far from Facebook's most expensive deal to date. Facebook acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion in 2015.
Topics Facebook Oculus
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
International Man of Monocracy
Spoiler Alert by Scott Spencer
Tolstoy Goes Digital, and Other News by Sadie Stein
Who’s Afraid of the Russian Soul?
The Faint, Gray Areas by Lisa John Rogers
This Is Just to Say by Sadie Stein
Contra Dancing with Pierre Reverdy by Diane Mehta
Don’t Snip My Brakes in Long Beach by Dave Tompkins
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。