About

I am Lisa Chau, one of the co-founders of Ownet.  As a creator, curator, and connector, social media and digital networks have been vital to my life.  I’ve been a power user of such platforms since my graduate student days at Dartmouth College, where I completed an independent study of the participatory culture of Web 2.0  I wrote a paper about how the internet democratized the publishing industry.  Media would no longer be controlled by the select few.  

Now, I’m taking that idea to the next step by working on revolutionizing social networks as we’ve known them to operate.  Inspired by the alumni of the Tuck School of Business, I’ve put together a team of entrepreneurs with complementary skills and talents.  As a group, we represent over 80 years of experience on Wall Street, business, academia, social media, strategy, and technology.     

My team and I are poised to overthrow the monopoly of existing digital prisons which have reaped approximately two decades of our contributions without sharing any profits in return.  Ownet’s disruptive technology will allow users to claim their stake in billions of advertising dollars that other greedy platforms have hoarded for far too long.  

We all deserve profit-sharing for our contributions and time on social networks.  Ownet makes it possible with a patent-pending technology which offers stock to all registered users on the network.  No purchase is necessary.  Every member receives stock just for signing up.  They also earn additional stock for sharing content on the platform.

Join my team and I on a mission for social justice (social network justice, to be exact).  By joining forces in a mass exodus from Facebook and other platforms, we can lead the largest non-governmental transfer of wealth in history!

At the end of 2020, 3.6 billion people were using a social network and it is projected that number will increase 23% to 4.41 billion by 2025, according to data published in January 2021 by Statistica.com. Nearly 80% of all users, 2.75 billion people, are registered with Facebook, the largest general interest social network in the US and in the world.  Many are also registered with three or more social networks.

Social network users spend an average of 144 minutes per day using social media, equal to 16.8 hours per week and 67 hours per month, according to Statistica.com. For nearly half of all users, social networking has become the primary use of their free time-similar in time commitment to a part-time job. 

Nearly all new social networks have followed the Facebook business model whereby the network operator retains all the economics of the platform and users get none of the profits.  The time for disruption is now.  Join Ownet in the revolution!

DISCLOSURE

POP unLimited the parent company of Ownet, (the prospective "Issuer") is testing the waters under Regulation A and Regulation CF of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  This process allows companies to determine whether there may be interest in an eventual offering of its securities.  No money or other consideration is being solicited; if sent, it will not be accepted.  The Issuer is not under any obligation to make an offering under Regulation A.  The Issuer may choose to make an offering to some, but not all, of the people who indicate an interest in investing or in otherwise receiving shares, and that offering may not be made under Regulation A.  For example, the Issuer may determine to proceed with an offering under Regulation Crowdfunding (“Reg CF”). If the Issuer proceeds with a Reg CF offering, no offer to buy securities will be accepted, and no part of the purchase price will be received until a Form C is filed and, then, will only be accepted through the platform we conduct our Reg CF offering on. If the Issuer does go ahead with an offering under Regulation A, it will only be able to make sales after it has filed an offering statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and only after the SEC has qualified such an offering statement. The information in the offering statement will be more complete than the test-the-waters materials and could differ in important ways.  You must read the offering statement filed with the SEC before investing or receiving shares in the Issuer.  Any indication of interest provided by you in response to this communication carries no obligation or commitment of any kind.