Nathaniel Dourif Friedman (born 6 August 1977[1]) is an American technology executive and investor. He was the chief executive officer (CEO) of GitHub and former chairman of the GNOME Foundation. Friedman is currently a board member at the Arc Institute and an advisor of Midjourney.[2][3]
In 1999, Friedman co-founded Ximian (originally called International Gnome Support,[5] then Helix Code[6]) with de Icaza to develop applications and infrastructure for GNOME, the project de Icaza had started with the aim of producing a free softwaredesktop environment. The company was later bought by Novell in 2003.[7][8]
During his sabbatical, Friedman created and hosted a podcast called Hacker Medley with friend and former Ximian employee Alex Graveley.[15][16]
In May 2011, Friedman and de Icaza founded Xamarin, with Friedman as CEO.[10] The company was created to offer commercial support for Mono, a project that de Icaza had initiated at Ximian to provide a free software implementation of Microsoft's .NET software stack. At Xamarin they focused on continuing to develop Mono and MonoDevelop and marketing the cross-platform Xamarin SDK to developers targeting mobile computing devices and video game consoles. In 2016, Xamarin was acquired by Microsoft.[17]
With the June 2018 announcement of Microsoft's $7.5 billion (~$8.96 billion in 2023) acquisition of GitHub, the companies simultaneously announced that Friedman, then a Microsoft corporate vice president, would become GitHub's new CEO.[18][19][20][21] GitHub's co-founder and then-current CEO Chris Wanstrath had been leading a search for his replacement since August 2017.[22][23] Friedman assumed the role of CEO on October 29, 2018.[24] During his tenure as CEO, Friedman introduced a number of new products rapidly, including GitHub Copilot, GitHub Codespaces, a native GitHub mobile app for iOS and Android, the GitHub Advanced Security product, GitHub Sponsors to support open source developers financially, and a new GitHub CLI. Friedman also acquired six companies including NPM, Semmle, Dependabot, and PullPanda. He helped grow GitHub to an estimated value of $16.5 billion (~$19.7 billion in 2023),[25] more than double what Microsoft paid for GitHub in 2018. In November 2021, Friedman announced that he was stepping down as CEO.[26]
Friedman co-founded California YIMBY in 2017 to address California's housing shortage.[27]
Alongside Daniel Gross, Friedman also has made significant investments in the AI space through a fund called C2 Investments, as well as running an AI grant program that gives funding and Microsoft Azure credits.[29] During the depositor run on Silicon Valley Bank in mid-March 2023, Friedman provided capital to multiple startups.[30]
Personal life
He has been married to Stephanie Friedman (née Schatz) since 2009.[31][32] They have a daughter,[33] and live in Menlo Park since 2022, having moved there from San Francisco after a home-invasion.[34][35]