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Dan Fredinburg
Dan Fredinburg, a Google executive who described himself as an
adventurer, was among the more than 1300 people who died in a massive
earthquake that struck Nepal on Saturday.
Google confirmed his death. Lawrence You, the company's director of
privacy, posted online that Fredinburg was in Nepal with three other
Google employees climbing Mount Everest. The other three were safe, he
said.
Google would not give further details.
According to the
technology blog Re/Code, Fredinburg was an experienced climber
who co-founded, in his spare time, Google Adventure. The project aimed
to "translate the Google Street View concept into extreme, exotic
locations like the summit of Mount Everest or the Great Barrier Reef off
Australia", according to Startup Grind, a global startup community.
Feinberg also helped start Save the Ice, an organisation dedicated to
raising awareness about global warming "through adventurous campaigns
and events around the world," according to its website.
Fredinburg started at Google in 2007. He served as product manager
and the head of privacy at Google[x], the company's secretive arm best
known for "moonshot" projects such as the self-driving car.
Google said it has launched a
"person finder" tool
for Nepal to help people find loved ones in the aftermath of the quake
and "is working to get updated satellite imagery to aid in the recovery
effort".
Google said it was committing US$1 million ($1.3 million) to the quake response.
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