Jan. 8, 2026

#235: Craig Newmark — Craigslist

Craig Newmark is the founder of Craigslist and someone whose work has shaped the modern internet as we know it.


Long before Craigslist became one of the most enduring, important, and frequented platforms on the web, long before the internet even connected all of us, Craig was a computer science student here in Cleveland at Case Western Reserve University — tinkering with early programming languages, studying neural networks and AI, and exploring the frontier of software engineering.


The rest is history — an amazing history which we’ll cover in our conversation today, how Craig became the accidental entrepreneur behind one of the most legendary companies of our time, and a driving force of the internet itself. Our conversation spans his path to Silicon Valley, the creation and stewardship of Craigslist, the moral compass that has guided his decision making along the way, his growth as an entrepreneur and leader, the implications and consequences of building one of the largest platforms of all time, and the work he’s now doing to help meliorate the internet and country through his philanthropic initiatives with veterans, journalism, cybersecurity, and lots more.


This was a truly special conversation, and I’m grateful to share it with you today — please enjoy this awesome discussion with Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist.


00:00:00 Craig Newmark on Building Craigslist and the Early Internet
00:03:52 From Case Western to Craigslist: Craig Newmark’s Origin Story
00:07:21 Why Craigslist Was an Accidental Startup, Not a Planned Company
00:12:18 How Craigslist Helped Democratize the Internet for Everyday People
00:15:28 The Birth of Craigslist: From Email List to Iconic Website
00:18:31 Monetizing Craigslist Without Selling Out Users or Trust
00:20:23 Turning Down Billions: Craig Newmark’s Moral Compass at Craigslist
00:23:39 Why Craigslist’s Simple Design Beat Venture-Backed Competitors
00:25:50 How Craigslist Survived While Startups Tried to Unbundle It
00:30:22 What Craigslist Taught Craig Newmark About Human Behavior
00:31:58 Balancing Crime Prevention and Civil Liberties on Craigslist
00:36:00 Why Craigslist Became One of the Most Trusted Platforms Online
00:41:12 The Craigslist Design Philosophy: Simple, Fast, and Human
00:44:01 From Craigslist to Philanthropy: Craig Newmark’s Next Chapter
00:55:58 Craig Newmark’s Advice for Founders

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LINKS:
https://www.craigslist.org/
https://craignewmarkphilanthropies.org/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/craignewmark/
https://pausetake9.org/

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Transcript

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:00:00]:
The deal is that people see that we're for real. Craigslist is about helping people get through the day to put food on the table. In the longer run, Craigslist helped tens of millions of Americans realize that the Internet is actually useful for something that it's reasonably easy to use. And any luck I've had with Craigslist or anywhere has been by accidentally being in the right time and right place. Which kind of makes me the forest gump of the Internet.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:00:38]:
Welcome to the Lay of the Land podcast where we are exploring what people are building in Cleveland and throughout Northeast Ohio. I am your host Jeffrey Stern and today I had the genuine pleasure of speaking with Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist and someone who has shaped the modern Internet as we know it. Long before Craigslist became one of the most enduring, important and frequented platforms on the Internet, long before the Internet even connected us at all, Craig was a computer science student here in Cleveland at Case Western Reserve University, tinkering with early programming languages, studying neural networks and artificial intelligence at the time, and exploring the frontier of software engineering. The rest is history, as they say. An amazing history which we will cover in our conversation today. How Craig became the accidental entrepreneur behind one of the most, most legendary companies of our time and driving forces behind the Internet itself. Our conversation spans his path to Silicon Valley, the creation and stewardship of Craigslist, the moral compass that has guided his decision making along the way, and his growth personally as an entrepreneur and leader, the implications and consequences of building one of the largest platforms of all time, and the work he's doing today to help meliorate the Internet and country through his philanthropic initiatives with veterans, with journalism, with cybersecurity and and lots more. This was truly a special conversation and I'm very grateful to be able to share it with you today.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:02:06]:
So please enjoy this awesome discussion with Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist. Lay of the Land is brought to you and is proudly sponsored by Roundstone Insurance. Headquartered in Rocky River, Ohio. Roundstone shares Lay of the Land's same passion for bold ideas and lasting impact from our community's entrepreneurs, innovators and leaders. Since 2005 round Roundstone has pioneered a self funded captive health insurance model that delivers robust savings for small and medium sized businesses. They are part of the solution to rising healthcare costs, helping employers offer affordable, high quality care while driving job creation and economic growth throughout Northeast Ohio. Like many of the voices featured on Lay of the Land, including Roundstone's founder and CEO Mike Schroeder, Roundstone believes entrepreneurship, innovation and community to be the cornerstones of progress. The to learn more about how Roundstone.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:02:57]:
Is transforming employee health benefits by empowering.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:00]:
Employers to save thousands in per employee.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:02]:
Per year health care costs, Please visit.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:05]:
Roundstone insurance.com Roundstone Insurance built for entrepreneurs.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:10]:
Backed by innovation committed to Cleveland Long before the Internet connected all of us, long before, I think Craigslist would be cited as one of the prime examples of how it's connected us. You know, you were tinkering with software and computers and technology.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:27]:
You studied computer science here in Cleveland.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:03:29]:
At Case Western Reserve. And I'd love to start with, had you ever imagined that those technologies you were playing around with and studying then might one day bring together people really at the greatest scale in history, and that you would be such an important contributor to that kind of historic development?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:03:52]:
I had very little clue about how any of this would turn out. I should have known better. In particular, at Case Tech, there was a node of the arpanet, which was the predecessor to the Internet, and I kind of understood what it might be good for, but I barely touched it. That was a mistake on my part. And mostly I was focused on learning all the programming that I could because I realized I was good at it and I might wind up with a good career out of it.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:04:29]:
When you reflect back on that time and really your journey and just kind of trace your path back, what do you feel were the formative moments for you when you were younger that laid this foundation that sparked your curiosity in technology and the possibility for software?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:04:49]:
Well, as a kid, somehow I wound up being good at math and science. I don't really know how or why. I do know that by the fourth grade or so, I was interested in dinosaurs and rocks. Now, lots of kids are fascinated by dinosaurs. That's been pretty true for decades now. But when I got interested in that, this was 60, 65 years ago, and my interest was academic as well as playing with what I thought were cool, scary toys. I remember reading paleontology, whatever's suitable for a kid, and that was a lot of fun. And I could imagine myself heading out to the desert to find fossils.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:05:42]:
However, that only lasted a few years. Then I got interested in physics, nuclear physics, even a little bit of a quantum. You know, the reality underlying everything. And that sustained me kind of through high school. But by the time I got to college, in my first year at Case Tech, I realized that jobs in that kind of physics were really scarce. You had to be well within the top 1%. And I just wasn't that smart.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:06:19]:
Did you ever think about entrepreneurship or was that really beyond the scope of your interest?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:06:26]:
Frankly, I never thought about entrepreneurship at all until I found myself by accident being one.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:06:37]:
So I'm sort of embarrassed to say this, but it never really dawned on me until I was actually preparing for our conversation that Craigslist was literally Craigslist, like your list at the beginning of this. It never, never just unpacked the word itself. So as a accidental entrepreneur of sorts making this transition from longtime software development to curating your own list and starting a Craigslist, obviously what was the journey to becoming an entrepreneur and how did you navigate that having never really thought about it prior?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:07:21]:
Well, I'm going to be bouncing back and forth in time as I talk about this. In college, after realizing that I just wasn't smart enough to go into quantum physics, I thought AI looks pretty cool. I had read all that science fiction talking about machine consciousness, not that we know what consciousness is. And I considered that fairly seriously for a year or two. And then I started reading about it, reading up on neural networks for language understanding in its current form, that's large language models. And I took a look at that and it was fascinating. There was a book I think by Terry Winograd on the subject. And after a while I realized this is really cool and important and there wouldn't be any jobs available for decades, so I better get into a more mundane aspects of programming, either systems programming or application programming.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:08:25]:
So I learned everything that I could about that. I basically turned my time at CASE into a vocational training, the vocational matter being software engineering, even though that was the infancy of software engineering and I learned a lot about it. Unfortunately I didn't get a well rounded education. I took very little liberal arts, which I regret. But I got a really good education in software work and I just started plugging away doing that. I got a job at IBM in Boca Raton. I should have been more patient and see where else I might have gotten work. So I spent six years at IBM in Boca Raton.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:09:19]:
I figured I'll take a job not far from the beach. And it took me a long time to realize it, but I'm not a beach guy. I learned scuba diving and I realized, well, this is fun. It's kind of like my own Jacques Cousteau special. But it didn't really sustain my interest and I started going to science fiction conventions which were great for me and I still think about them a lot. I went to a whole bunch starting in the late 70s and then I Moved to Detroit. There was opportunity there and I thought I might like the people in Detroit better than South Florida. I guess I did.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:10:08]:
Kept going to a lot of science fiction conventions. Worked for IBM in the Detroit area doing factory automation work. You know, I was working for IBM but with gm, General Motors, and I acquired a lot of skills there. But frankly, through none of this did I acquire really important skills. Just getting along with people, frankly, as a nerd, I was oblivious to social skills. And as a result I would occasionally be a jerk, by which I mean an asshole. And I was pretty bad in some respects. I was learning a lot of technology, I was acquiring a lot of technical skills, but I was really remiss in terms of learning how to work with people.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:11:02]:
And I spent 17 years at IBM then and I really learned no entrepreneurial skills. I learned some business skills like the idea of learn of leading by example because I have no real top down leadership skills. And my only, the only hope for me. As one of my managers pointed out, I had a sense of humor and people seemed to like that even when they really didn't want to work with me. So after 17 years at IBM, after a couple of rounds of downsizing where I got laid off from work twice, I wound up getting myself a job in San Francisco at Charles Schwab. But the deal is, through none of that time was I really an entrepreneur in any sense. Not accidental, just nothing, no luck.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:12:07]:
Yeah, well. And so what was it about being in San Francisco that you feel then unlocked the entrepreneurial inclination?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:12:18]:
Well, there was something happening in San Francisco about using new technologies in a way that gave everyone opportunities. There were new ways of telling stories, new technologies which promised to be open and available to everyone. We talked back then about democratizing the Internet. And as I was at Charles Schwab, that's when the Internet became a real thing. I started using it, frankly, towards the end of my time in Detroit and through a brief year in Pittsburgh, IBM Pittsburgh, where I accomplished nothing. But I started learning about the Internet and taking it seriously. And because I had read so much science fiction, frankly, I kind of intuited that the Internet was going to change everything. So when I was at Charles Schwab, I went around the company teaching lunchtime brown bag lunches.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:13:23]:
And I said, hey, this is how Charles Schwab is going to operate someday. I was lucky. Because of my work, I was exposed to the Internet. At that point. There was a guy named Derek Maluski who brought in the first web server and the first graphical browser within the company. And looking at that and looking what was going on outside of Schwab, I'm thinking again, this is how the way the world will work. And specifically this is how Schwab is going to work. I wound up working with a marketing guy a bit named I think, Alan Nathan, saying, hey, this is how everything is going to work.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:14:09]:
Yep, pretty much no one got it at that point. I was part of another downsizing effort because I was still kind of a jerk. But I was really lucky because Schwab was generous. IBM had been generous as I left. And I wound up doing work with web design people. And I was prepared for when I got a good opportunity at bank of America. I was doing contract work for them. But the deal was that I was not an entrepreneur through any of this.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:14:52]:
I started what other people called Craigslist because kind of after my time at Schwab, I started a simple mailing list where I would tell people, hey, here's what's going on in town that I heard about using involving technology and arts. I started a simple mailing list and it spread word of mouth. And so by accident I started something which turned into Craigslist, but I had no clue to that effect.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:15:28]:
So today, I think it's something most probably take for granted, this idea that you can have trust at all on the Internet. You know, certainly that you would put your credit card information and purchase things from people you've never met. And so many of the just online interactions that we have today and how dependent they are on a baseline level of trust. I, I don't know that it was obvious that we'd be able to establish all that in this virtual world. Certainly at the time that you were building it. How did it evolve at that point in time from just a list that you were sending out into really what has grown today and to what we think about as online communities?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:16:13]:
Well, my deal was that in the middle of 95, again trying to work in the area of web design, my mailing list, which was a CC list, had grown to maybe 240 addresses. At which point the CC list part broke. I had to use a list server, you know, and a guy named Eric Theiss volunteered the use of his major domo installation. He had a web server at the time. He had a 1 megabit line to his server, which at that point in time was really high speed, high bandwidth. And I had to give the thing a name because listservs need names. You had to distinguish one from the other. And as a nerd, I'm a Pretty literal guy.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:17:07]:
I was going to call it San Francisco Events, since at that point it was still mostly events. People around me, though, told me they already called it Craigslist. In particular, there was a guy named Anthony Batt who told me that's what people called it and that I had inadvertently created a brand. He explained to me what a brand is because I didn't know, because I was that far removed from a business. He was right. I called it Craigslist, signifying it would be personal and occasionally quirky. And I just kept plugging away with the thing. It was just me for a few years.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:17:55]:
In 96, I realized, oh, I'm a programmer. I can write code which turns web pages into HTML and I could write the code and do it more or less for free. So I had instant Web publishing around mid 96 or so. And then by the end of 97 I realized that my website, the first Craigslist site, was getting about a million page views per month. Back then, that was pretty good.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:18:30]:
Yep.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:18:31]:
Also, people who were putting jobs on the site wanted to pay me to do that. And then people started coming to me to help run this site on a volunteer basis. And that made sense because I needed some help for the most part. When some things took more than an hour every day, I would just write some code to greatly simplify whatever I was doing. And that meant that what took me an hour or more would only take me minutes. There's a lesson there about writing code and productivity. But in 98, I tried running things with volunteers and frankly, that failed pretty badly. So by the end of 99, a lot of the people who wanted me to succeed told me I had to become a real entrepreneur.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:19:33]:
I had to start charging people to post jobs and so on, for sure, not just in a half assed way. And I had to make a decision about monetizing the site. So I figured I would charge people who were already paying way too much for less effective ads and that I didn't need to make a lot of money doing this. I remembered my teachers In Sunday school, Mr. And Mrs. Levin, telling me, you know, that I should know when enough was enough. So I monetized minimally. So that wasn't an altruistic decision, that was just me remembering what I learned in Sunday school.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:20:23]:
Because around this point through 98, I would go to industry events and parties and the bankers and venture capitalists were telling me I should monetize everything as much as I could, the usual Silicon Valley way. They would throw billions at me and a Guy recently estimated I could have made around 11 billion. His estimate jives with my guesswork. But again, I decided I would remain true to the moral compass my Sunday school teachers taught me. And so I made one really big decision because I had accidentally started a business up, but I did so in a way consistent with what I believe in. And since I wasn't taking investment money, and I never have, I could make these decisions on my own. I got lucky timing wise, because the most I ever spent on the site was 35 bucks a month for web hosting services. And that's kind of nothing then and nothing now.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:21:40]:
99 that year, like, I rewrote the code. I used a real database engine called MySQL and after finishing some coding and then hiring some programmers, I stepped down from any coding responsibilities. Tech was led by a guy named Jim Buckmaster. He was running things. I was both being CEO and doing a lot of customer service. And this is through 99. But towards the end of 99, I realize I'm not an entrepreneur. I'm really bad at tough decisions like hiring and firing.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:22:30]:
Looks like Jim would be good at this. So around the end of two, end of 99 or so, I realized that I should step down as CEO. Make Jim the CEO. He would do a better job. But while I kind of suck as a manager, I'm a great customer service rep. So starting end of 99, maybe beginning of 2000, I'm not sure I would just do customer service. And I did that and nothing but customer service until sometime in. Until sometime in 2018, at which point I retired.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:23:18]:
The deal is that Jim has done a better job than I could. And any luck I've had with Craigslist or anywhere has been by accidentally being in the right time and right place, which kind of makes me the Forrest Gump of the Internet.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:23:39]:
Sure, as Forrest Gumping around. Well, there are a lot of threads there I want to pull on. I mean, certainly, I mean, if you just kind of consider Craigslist in the context of the tech world today, we're in this era of social media dominance, algorithms controlling the feeds now, this whole frenzy around AI. And to me, and particularly hearing you just reflect on the journey and I think the humility with which, you know, you approach your own leadership as part of it. I mean, Craigslist is kind of the antithesis to all of that. We talked about the discipline with which you approach the business model, you know, kind of grounded in your values. And I feel that kind of permeates to design as well, which is something I want to talk about. But to kind of frame a few of these topics, there's this picture on the Internet that maybe speaks to that 11 billion left on the table that shows the homepage of Craigslist and overlays a bucket of categories of startups over time that have been tailor built specifically to unbundle specific sections of Craigslist.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:25:03]:
And you can go, you know, nextdoor, Tinder, Reddit, Zillow, Airbnb and the list. It literally goes on. And I kind of wanted to understand, I imagine the pressure. It would have been very easy over the years to succumb to expanding beyond traditional classifieds into other verticals or to lean more heavily into ads. But what do you feel has kept Craigslist as one of the top sites on the Internet today? Basically 30 years later, you know, users still love the site despite an entire industry of venture backed companies that have been started and have been largely successful in their own right, playing in the same space that Craigslist has. I'm just curious how you think about that.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:25:50]:
Well, my deal is that we kept things simple. I built this philosophy of minimal modernization into the DNA of the company. I chose Jim because he believed in the same thing. He's kept the faith over all these years. It's been 25 and I said could just focus on customer service. And then when the customer service team no longer needed me, I was able to go full time in philanthropy in a way where my faith was rewarded. And starting in 2015, I started doing more and more philanthropy. Retired at the end of 2018, went into philanthropy full time.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:26:40]:
And that's worked out for the Craigslist community, But it's also worked out fairly well for the country because my focus has been on good stuff for the country, for example, in cybersecurity and also to support military families and vets.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:27:00]:
Yeah, and I certainly want to unpack the philanthropic work you're doing. Maybe one of the ways to broach that is. I mean, a lot of things become very obvious in retrospect, but in the moment maybe aren't so obvious at the time. And as you began to build what ultimately is an online classifieds platform, how had you thought about kind of, if at all, the state of traditional classifieds in the world of newspapers and kind of the fundamental disruption at that time that Craigslist kind of played in, the real fundamental disruption of an alternative industry in the transition to the era of Internet.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:27:52]:
I was thinking a lot about classifieds, mostly how to do it better. Way back I realized that Craigslist would have a effect on newspaper classifieds. They were slow to catch up. But newspapers did start doing some of the same, but maybe too late. So I've always assumed that Craigslist had a substantial effect on newspaper revenues. I thought that way until 2018, when an industry analyst named Thomas Bechtel actually ran the numbers. And he tells me that he can understand how maybe my ego might play a role in thinking that Craigslist had an effect. But he tracked it all the way back to the 60s.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:28:47]:
That is, he tracked newspaper revenues back then. And he's saying that TV news had a major effect on newspaper revenues starting in the 60s and continued on a straight line down until 2008 or so, at which point Facebook and Google started consuming a lot of newspaper revenues. He tells me that he couldn't measure any effect from Craigslist. No blips. So all my concern was kind of, well, it was well intentioned, but wasted because the problem that newspapers had looks like it was all TV news until 2008, when Facebook and Google somehow around then became a problem. Why around then, I have no idea. I don't think Thomas has ventured an explanation. But I thought about it.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:29:51]:
I didn't think of them as competition because the idea was just to do a good job serving the community. And that continues to be the right idea. That's my idea of entrepreneurship. Do something real that benefits community and that works.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:30:11]:
What did you learn from your time in the customer service part of the business? What sticks with you from that era.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:30:22]:
Doing customer service? Well, I would see what a lot of people in the country were doing online. And I saw that everyone, everywhere in the country, people operate out of goodwill for the most part. They want to get through the day, they want to put food on the table, and now and then they want to help each other out. There are bad actors out there, but the role of bad actors has been greatly sensationalized by people looking for clickbait. And now we have perception problems where again, people are overwhelmingly good, both online and in real life. However, there are bad actors who exaggerate the prevalence of bad behavior of crime. They usually do so to make a profit and they don't care who they hurt.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:31:23]:
How did your thinking on those kinds of adversarial actors online evolve over time? You know, I imagine when you had started, you know, just from your own list, did not maybe think about or envision at scale, but inevitably with a free public online platform, I mean, we're seeing this obviously across many platforms today, this sort of Unbeatable problem of anonymous adversarial people online and just the way that changes people's behavior. But just how your thinking on that evolved.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:31:58]:
I've been thinking about it a lot for 30 years. Yeah, in part, my thinking was affected by my high school history and civics class, which was really good. Basically, I learned that, hey, you want to help the cops fight the bad guys, but in our country, we have this Constitution and the Bill of Rights and other amendments which basically say that the accused have rights, they're innocent until proven guilty, and there's all this due process stuff like search warrants and subpoenas. And that stayed with me until around when I started Craigslist. I also met up with folks from the Electronic Frontier foundation, which had just started around the same time, and they were trying to figure out what rights do people online have and how do you fight for those rights while helping out the cops? And that started my thinking out. So from the very beginning, I was talking with people who were genuine, smart people about rights online. From kind of the beginning, I was starting to talk with cops about what they needed to do to help fight crime online. And I've never stopped having those conversations.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:33:30]:
Again, the deal is that on the one hand, you want to fight bad actors, you want to fight crime. On the other hand, I am very committed, even on an emotional basis, to protecting the rights of the accused, to the idea of innocent until proven guilty and our Constitution as amended, particularly with the Bill of Rights. The founders of this country did a really good job with some mistakes of which have been fixed in large part. And that shaped my thinking and I've stuck to it. I preach this, I practice what I preach, and that's been pretty good. In the last couple months, I've realized that I need to renew my commitment to fighting crime online and in particular to I need to do more work on fighting scams online as part of my cybersecurity efforts. The problem has been that with Craigslist, the most crap I've gotten from people have been when the company does a good job of fighting crime online. Because while you're doing that, while law enforcement operations are in progress, you can't talk about them.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:34:56]:
Because when you talk about them, the bad actors, the crooks see what you're doing and figure out how to work around that. Unfortunately, while you're being discreet about this, different bad actors find that they could run different scams, often fundraising scams, that kind of thing.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:35:19]:
Yep.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:35:20]:
And then they start talking about crime fighting operations. And once they start Doing that, the cops start saying, hey, these things are growing less effective and at some point they say, thanks, but it's not worth it anymore.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:35:41]:
Yet I think despite perhaps the misguided perception one way or the other, it's still one of the most trusted platforms in the country for connecting people, even today.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:36:00]:
Yeah, thanks. The deal is that people see that we're for real. Craigslist is about helping people get through the day to put food on the table and that's it in the day to day sense. In the longer run, Craigslist helped tens of millions of Americans realize that the Internet is actually useful for something that it's reasonably easy to use. As a company, we don't have to squeeze every dollar we could out of the site. I do want to give special credit to one other site which has maintained a great moral compass, specifically Wikipedia, which like I say, Wikipedia is where facts go to live. And Jimmy Wales vision of a free site for knowledge for everyone. He stayed true to that.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:37:06]:
And now the people who run it, the Wikimedia foundation, are keeping the faith. And I help out however I can, both with contributions and funding things like Wikipedia classes for beginners.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:37:23]:
That's certainly a kindred adherence to principles. The lore of Craigslist is also pretty legendary. I mean, I certainly remember growing up and going through people's compiled best Craigslist listings of all time, hilarious ones, missed connections, famous ones like the yoga mat for sale used ones. There's just a lot of legendary moments out there. Are there particular ones that you find yourself reminiscing on over the years in terms of ads?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:38:06]:
Not as much as you'd imagine because I've always felt like there's a bit of a conflict of interest. I just wrote about this on the theme of this Craig use Craigslist. And I sold my next to last car ever, a Saturn, through the site. And I'm careful about that. And frankly, I'm lucky that my wife, Mrs. Newmark, has taken on all the Craigslist duties for the last ten or more years. When we want to give something away free, she handles it. When we want to sell something, which is rare nowadays, she'll do it.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:38:52]:
Maybe more importantly, she will use Craigslist to buy stuff a lot for our family because people in our family, they don't want anything that we would buy new for them. But if Mrs. Newmark and Gray Day can get a really good deal by buying something on Craigslist, she'll do that. And I think she's gotten a lot of really good Vintage furniture on the site and that works out pretty great, which means I don't have to think about that kind of ever. And our last car, because I don't drive anymore, we just gave away to people in the family because there's a lot of kids who are now driving age and they need the car, which I bought like 20 years ago.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:39:52]:
Yeah. Well, that is pretty interesting. So you found yourself not so much as a user of the platform itself.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:40:03]:
Yeah. The deal is that I've always wondered what would be ethical, what would not be ethical. And I've never resolved that, although my friends and advisors tell me I thought about it too much and we should just use it. And Mrs. Newmark didn't ask for permission, she just did what was useful. And in my case, I thought I might have to beg for forgiveness. But that never became a thing.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:40:36]:
Yeah, so if you were to go to your own website, you know, today, if you went to Craigslist, it's kind of astonishing because it's simple, it's fast, it's still text based. And I think most interestingly, it's largely the same minimalist, simple aesthetic that it's been. And much like you resisted maybe the pressure on the business model and monetization side, just what's been your philosophy on design and aesthetic of the website?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:41:12]:
Well, in 96, remember, that's when I realized, oh, I'm a programmer, I can write code and get web publishing for free. I was thinking about the site and maybe it should be fancy. And I realized I have no skills for making it fancy. All I know is to keep it simple and to the point and fast. That's how we started. That's the design philosophy that Jim maintained. And over the years I've realized that fancy doesn't usually do people any good. It usually means that things are hard to figure out and slow and buggy.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:41:57]:
Like, I use one particular airline site a lot. They got fancy and they're buggy. And they don't seem to be able to ever modify the site without introducing newer bugs as they fix them. So simple, fast, to the point. That's a good approach. Well, to everything.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:42:25]:
Yeah. I mean, there's a longevity in it. There's, I think, a surprising creativity just in it as well. It's stood the test of time, obviously.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:42:38]:
Yeah, that worked for me. And like, I think it was my first south by Southwest that I went to. I stumbled onto a session called something like Design Eye for the List Guy, where designers were showing alternative designs they didn't know I was going to be in the audience because I didn't know I would be. I just felt in the mood at the last minute, not knowing it was focused on Craigslist. They showed a lot of very attractive, smart designs which no one asked for. And it was pretty entertaining for me and awkward for the panelists, I guess, but it didn't change anything.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:43:26]:
Yeah, that's funny. So ultimately, you decided to step away from the business, as you mentioned, turning your focus to causes that you care about and working on them philanthropically.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:43:45]:
At.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:43:45]:
That point in time. And today, I imagine you're in a position where obviously you could work on anything that you'd like to and how you came to discern which things you wanted to focus on and what some of those are today.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:44:01]:
Well, basically, towards the end of my time at Craigslist, like around 2015, I realized that the team needs me less and less, but I've made more money than I thought I would. And I was talking to people in the philanthropy world, and they said that I could do some real good in philanthropy. So I started doing a little and then started doing a lot more. The first area where I started doing a lot more was to help out American military veterans, because veterans, well, they got a lot of lip service. You know, people knew that we should do more for vets, but as a country, we weren't doing it. So I started working with the Iraq and Afghanistan vets of America. And then I did more, and then I started doing more. And nowadays, one big area for my philanthropy is to support military families and vets.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:45:09]:
The idea is that I have outsourced all my support for vets to Bob Woodruff Foundation. I've outsourced all my support for military families to blue star families. I've committed over five years or so to. To $200 million to support military families and vets, and that's what I call a good use of money. Also, I'm working a lot on how do we protect the country online, and that means protecting the country and regular people against cyber attacks and against online scams, because there's a lot of businesses doing a lot of great work on cybersecurity, but hardly anyone is looking out for regular people. And, you know, I've been working on that at Craigslist for over 25 years, and I could work with a lot of other organizations to help protect everyone. That's what I spend most of my time doing. The hardest part of all that is not technology, but how do we mobilize the entire country to fight cyber? Attacks and to fight scams.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:46:34]:
And that means a lot of marketing, advertising and pr, which is embodied in this Pause Take Nine campaign that we're running, telling everyone that when they see something iffy on the net, don't click on anything until you've reflected on it for a little while.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:46:54]:
Yeah, I appreciate the framing of Craigslist as something that introduced basically a lot of society to the value and use of the Internet and how easy it could be to interact with it. And I think you just kind of introduced a little bit of how you're thinking about it today. But what, what is your thoughts today on the state of the Internet? Obviously, with AI as well, I think it's pretty also fascinating that, you know, you were academically interested in it back when you were a student and how it's, you know, now come to fruition to a degree. Are you optimistic about it? Are you pessimistic about it?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:47:40]:
I have a lot of mixed feelings because as an old computer guy, one of the operational slogans is garbage in, garbage out. So I'm excited about what generative AI can do, let's say, for drug discovery and testing, what it can do if you're genuinely committed to customer service. However, a lot of generative AI models, large language models, are trained kind of carelessly on sources that people know are not what you call reliable. For example, if your training includes the Beijing People's Daily or the same thing out of Moscow or Tehran or North Korea, that means your large language model is going to have a lot of bad information in it, which means you know that your large language model is going to hallucinate a lot. Hallucination is just an entertaining term for lying to people. So we have a big problem with large language models which aren't reliable, and I worry about that a lot. However, the lawyers are starting to think about it a lot more than I do. They're smarter than me about it because they're starting to think about what are the liability issues involved here? If somebody acts on advice of a large language model and they get hurt, like the lawyers are thinking, who do they sue? Are there laws that have been broken? And that's what I think about most.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:49:26]:
Aside from the kind of crime fighting and cybersecurity work that I've been doing for 25, 30 years, depending on how you count.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:49:38]:
You mentioned that you wish you had studied more liberal arts. I'm curious what you hope to have gotten out of that as a technologist and what you feel the lessons there to unearth are on one Level, I.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:49:57]:
Think I would like to know a lot more about music, about art history. But more importantly, in college, I wish I had learned a lot more about people, about empathy, about the ability to read social cues, because I really am a nerd. I am still bad at reading social cues, and I really am not good at social skills. I mean, I can fake it for a while. I've been doing so as we spoke. But seriously, whenever you think I'm exhibiting or using social skills, I'm faking it. And I can only do for so long, after which I start becoming cranky.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:50:47]:
Hmm. Oh, you're doing a good job.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:50:54]:
I can fake it for this long.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:50:57]:
Yeah. How do you feel that the enough is enough philosophy, if you will, or, you know, the lessons learned from Sunday school? How do you best permeate those kinds of kindergarten lessons in the business world today? And how could more companies and entrepreneurs, I think, follow the playbook to the degree that you feel there, there is one in the path that you've charted for that kind of approach to business?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:51:33]:
I'm not going to judge anyone else. I'm not going to really preach to them. All I know is how to lead by example, which is to say I, in my philanthropic work, I would give away the vast bulk of my net worth and be just loud enough for other people to consider following in this path. A few years ago, for example, I decided to give most of my money away, all my substantial income generation. What I did is I put all my Craigslist equity into the kind of a foundation that's what they call a C4. And I didn't get very loud about it, but I did talk about it publicly. And I'm hoping that other people see that and think about knowing when enough is enough. I'm thinking a lot more about the billionaire's pledge, the giving pledge, which.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:52:41]:
Well, I'm not a billionaire, but at the very least, I could do my part along those lines. And there will be announcements to come about that. So I'm not going to judge anyone else. I'm just going to talk about what I do to practice what I preach and then hope that other people may notice, knowing that I'm really not good at this, not good at talking about it, and I am getting help regarding talking about it, and I'll just have to keep plugging away only as long as I live. After that, it's over. Yep.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:53:27]:
Well, I. I appreciate you speaking, speaking to it. Now, you had mentioned science fiction as a barometer for what might come next and kind of As a guide to your early intuition about the implications for what the Internet might be. And I'm curious, as you just look at the Internet today, what you feel is kind of on the horizon, given the science fiction that you've read and where you feel this is all going.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:54:02]:
Well in a way with generative AI? In large part, reality is caught up with science fiction. The part that people aren't realizing predicted in science fiction about how AI would be abused to persuade lots of people to do things that are actually bad for everyone. Because right now bad actors are using AI to do things like to vote against their own interests. And I talk with people quietly about what can be done about that. I do so very discreetly because this kind of work requires the social skills that I lack. And the people who might be good at this, well, I don't talk about them or what they're doing because I really don't want to identify them to bad actors because the bad actors who are abusing AI in big ways, they fight dirty and I don't want to paint a target on anyone.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:55:12]:
Are you optimistic about our ability to, to combat that over time as science fiction is becoming science fact here?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:55:24]:
Well, I struggle to maintain my optimism and it's a battle every day and I am optimistic. But I don't have really good reasons for saying why I'm optimistic.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:55:41]:
Yeah, it's intuition, instinct. What advice might you offer to a young person today? Someone getting started, maybe a fellow self proclaimed nerd like yourself?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:55:58]:
Well, if someone is starting something and they're good with technology, that may mean that they're lacking in social skills, which means that they need to do whatever they can to either learn social skills, I don't have any good idea how, or to get people on their team who are really good at talking about what they do. The deal is that having good technology isn't enough for success. You have to be really good these days at, well, whether you call it marketing or advertising or pr, you need to be good at it because people need to know that you have a good product or whatever you have to do. Pretty serious audience development because again, it doesn't matter if you've done great technology if no one cares. So that's why I suggest people need to care about what you're doing and people need to pay attention and you know, you're responsible for that. Word of mouth kind of worked for me, but that's because I started things at the beginning of the dot com world and I was able to run things through some years without Expense. And I got lucky in terms of the time and place. Like I said, I'm the forest gump of the Internet.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:57:29]:
But my success has started because of luck, because an accident. And then I turned things over to Jim, who did the job. Right.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:57:40]:
What do you hope to be the legacy of Craigslist?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:57:47]:
The legacy of Craigslist, I think means just keep on doing what we've done. That's right. That helps people, like in the near term, in the day to day. Craigslist helps people put food on the table. That's pretty good when you take a longer term view. Craigslist is about showing people the Internet is useful and can be reasonably easy to use. The reasonably easy to use part is still something that designers are learning. And I remember that every time I have a hard time figuring out what I gotta do because people have made things too difficult.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:58:36]:
Right.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:58:39]:
The commitment to simplicity is. I certainly appreciate it. Well, Craig, this was a fantastic conversation. I certainly appreciate your time and willingness to reflect on the journey and the work you're doing today and just how you've thought all about it. I had a lot of fun just learning from you, so thank you.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:59:06]:
Hey, it's my pleasure. This is just me being a nerd. And like I say, a nerd's got to do what a nerd's got to do.

 

Jeffrey Stern [00:59:17]:
As a fellow nerd, it certainly resonates and I appreciate your willingness to. To do what a nerd's got to do. I want to ask just one more traditional closing question which, if you'll indulge the trip down memory lane back to Case Western and your time in Cleveland, just what your favorite memory is of your time in Cleveland.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [00:59:44]:
I don't know if I have a specific favorite one. I just wish I had better. I just wish I appreciated more what I had there. I had the opportunity to learn a great deal and I did learn a great deal, but I should have gotten a more rounded education. So I wish I could go back, but you can't go back. The past really is a foreign country.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:00:13]:
Yeah. Well, thank you, Craig.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:00:16]:
If.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:00:18]:
If you had to point people somewhere on the Internet as a plug, where, where would you direct them as a follow up to the work you're. You're doing today?

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [01:00:29]:
Well, I'd point people to Wikipedia and I'd point people to our cybersecurity and scam fighting thing. That, that's pause take, not.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:00:40]:
Awesome. Well, thank you again, Craig. Really appreciate it.

 

Craig Newmark (Craigslist) [01:00:44]:
Thanks again.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:00:48]:
That's all for this week. Thank you for listening. We'd love to hear your thoughts on today's show. So if you have any feedback, please send over an email to jeffreyoftheland fm or find us on Twitter odleftheland or @sternhefe j e f E if you or someone you know would make a good guest for our show, please reach out as well and let us know. And if you enjoy the podcast, please subscribe and leave a review on itunes or on your preferred podcast player. Your support goes a long way to help us spread the word and continue to bring the Cleveland founders and builders.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:01:20]:
We love having on the show.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:01:21]:
We'll be back here next week at the same time to map more of the land. The Lay of the Land podcast was developed in collaboration with the UP Company LLC at the time of this recording. Unless otherwise indicated, we do not own equity or other financial interests in the.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:01:36]:
Company which appear on the show.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:01:38]:
All opinions expressed by podcast participants are solely their own and do not reflect the opinions of any entity which employs us. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions. Thank you for listening and we'll talk.

 

Jeffrey Stern [01:01:53]:
To you next week.