Nova Spivack


Nova Spivack is an American entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and author. He is the founder and CEO of the early stage science and technology incubator Magical and co-founder of The Arch Mission Foundation.
Spivack previously co-founded Bottlenose; EarthWeb; Radar Networks, which was acquired by EVRI; The Daily Dot; and Live Matrix, which was acquired by OVGuide in December 2011. He has invested in companies such as Klout, which was acquired by Lithium, Sensentia, PublishThis, Next IT, and is a venture partner in Rewired. He is also an advisor for EES Ventures, a seed fund focused on energy innovation, and is on the board of directors of the Common Crawl Foundation.

Early life and education

Nova Spivack was born in Boston and grew up in Watertown, Massachusetts. He was admitted early to the University of Massachusetts Boston and attended while still in high school. In 1989, he participated in summer research at MIT and took part in a study of parallel computing techniques for research on chaos- and complexity theory focused on Cellular Automata. He studied philosophy at Oberlin College with focus on artificial intelligence and cognitive science, and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1991. Spivack attended International Space University in 1992. He majored in Space Life Sciences, and also worked on ISU’s space humanities program. His studies at ISU were funded by NASA and the ESA. While at ISU, he also worked in Japan on a project to build an international solar power satellite system. Spivack later trained with the Russian Air Force in reduced-gravity parabolic flight and flew to edge of space with Space Adventures in 1999.

Career

Early career

In the late 1980s, while a college student, Spivack developed software for Kurzweil Computer Products and later at Thinking Machines. In 1993, Spivack worked at Individual, Inc., a venture that developed intelligent software to filter news sources.
Nova Spivack co-founded EarthWeb, a website that provided career development resources and technical information to IT professionals, in 1994. While at EarthWeb, Spivack helped establishments including AT&T, Sony, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, BMG Music Club, and the New York Stock Exchange launch their first large-scale Web operations. EarthWeb's successfully executed an initial public offering in November 1998. At the time, EarthWeb's first-day return was among the largest in NASDAQ history and helped recapture dwindling investor interest in new equity offerings from Internet-based companies. EarthWeb’s content business was acquired by Internet.com in 2000. EarthWeb's property Dice.com remained a stand-alone business until it was acquired for approximately US$200 million in 2005, followed by a NASDAQ initial public offering in 2007.

2000-2009

From 1999-2000, Spivack helped co-found and build nVention Convergence Ventures, an in-house intellectual property incubator of SRI International and Sarnoff Laboratories. While consulting to nVention, Spivack founded two companies of his own: business incubator Lucid Ventures in 2001 and technology venture Radar Networks in 2003. Radar Networks invented technologies based on Semantic Web standards that the company also licensed to CALO, an SRI project funded by DARPA. Spivack raised initial outside venture funding for Radar Networks in April 2006.
Radar Networks introduced its first commercial product Twine, a Semantic Web-based tool for information storage, authoring and discovery, in 2008. Twine was acquired by Evri, a venture backed by Paul Allen, in March 2010.
In 2009, Spivack became the first investor in Klout.com, a website and mobile app that measures social influence.

2010-present

Spivack and Sanjay Reddy launched Live Matrix, which aimed to provide a unified Web-based guide to all scheduled content and events taking place on the Internet. Live Matrix was acquired by OVGuide in December 2011.
Bottlenose, a Los Angeles-based enterprise trend intelligence company co-founded by Spivack that analyzes social media and business data to detect trends for brands, launched from stealth mode in April 2011. Spivack co-founded the company in 2010 with Dominiek ter Heide. Bottlenose provides software that discovers emerging trends in high-volume data streams such as social media firehoses; live TV and radio media; and real-time enterprise data such as financial and IT streams.
The Daily Dot, an online newspaper co-founded by Spivack that covers news on internet communities and trends, launched in August 2011. Spivack serves as a patron for the Commercial Spaceflight Federation. He is also a member of the Education and Awareness Council of For All Moonkind, Inc. a nonprofit organization dedicated to developing the legal framework necessary to manage and protect human cultural heritage in space.
In 2015, Spivack co-founded The Arch Mission Foundation, a non-profit organization created to spread knowledge across the solar system. Through the Arch Mission Foundation, Spivack curated the first permanent space library, which contained Isaac Asimov's Foundation Trilogy contained on a quartz disk aboard the Tesla Roadster that was sent to space aboard the SpaceX Heavy Falcon rocket in 2018. Spivack is also the founder and CEO of Magical Corporation, a science and technology venture studio.

Authorship

Spivack is considered a leading pioneer in semantic web technology. Spivack has authored approximately 100 granted and pending patents. He writes about the future of the Internet and topics concerning search, social media, personalization, information filtering, entrepreneurship, and Web technology and applications. Spivack has been interviewed by TechCrunch, Live Science, Space.com and other publications regarding the development of data storage for use in space missions and the preservation of earth's civilization.

Personal life

Nova Spivack is the grandson of management theorist Peter F. Drucker. He is married to Kimberly Rubin-Spivack. His parents are poet Kathleen Spivack and inventor Mayer Spivack.