anyone with a...
anyone with a substantial public visibility announcing that they are suddenly
bleeding out $10 million a month in fraud would send serious shocks through
the investor base. But I think, even if they did that, it’s likely they wouldn’t have
been successful because—we had talked to a lot of them both as a potential
acquirer and as partnership potential—none of them had actually ever gone to
the sort of stuff that we did for our anti-fraud work.
Max Levchin 11
The default of how you do these things is very powerful, if you’ve been in
the industry for a long time. So we were sort of beneficiaries of our na?vet?. We
thought, “We don’t know how to do this; let’s just invent it.”
Livingston: What else worried you?
Levchin: There was always something, every day. I could not sleep well for
4 years. If you are in charge of technology at a really fast-growing company that
gets lots of publicity, there’s always something that worries you. In early 2000, it
was scalability. We had a few days when the site was down. Even though we
were adding servers and rewriting code to be more scalable, at a certain point
the original design was starting to crack. It was kind of painful.
Peter was pretty good at insulating me. He’d be talking to the reporters saying,
“We’re growing so fast.” eBay lost, I think, 20 percent of their market cap
one time—they had this downtime, when the system went down because of
scalability concerns a few years before and so the reporters were asking, “Is this
like eBay? Are you guys going to be down for a week?” So it was really tense.
Livingston: What were some of the more intense moments?
Levchin: One of the more intense moments was when Peter and our PR guy
were flabbergasted with this reporter who demanded to talk to someone technical,
because he wanted to hear from the horse’s mouth what’s going to happen.
I was on the phone with the guy, and he asked, “Is this just like eBay? Are
you guys going to crash? Are you not going to be able to scale?” I said, “Dude, I
haven’t slept for 3 days trying to fix the problem.” Of course he said, “I’m going
to quote you on that.” Peter was worried.
It’s one of those things where you have to fly by the seat of your pants all the
time. It would be nice to test some hardware and set up a big lab: “We have
x systems now; let’s 2x the systems and get twice the amount of hardware and
see if it can scale.” But, it doesn’t work that way because, by the time you are
done testing 2x, the real system is 3x because the growth is so fast. We were getting
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