Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is set to testify before Congress about the company's ongoing data-privacy scandal.
In March, a former Cambridge Analytica employee accused the social media company of mishandling the personal information of more than 50 million Facebook users in an effort to help Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. Facebook later announced that as many as 87 million users worldwide were affected.
Here's what you need to know about Zuckerberg.
1. Zuckerberg was 20 years old when he started Facebook with the help of some friends in his Harvard dorm room. In 2004, he launched thefacebook.com, a site just for Harvard students.
2. He never actually graduated from Harvard. He dropped out during his sophomore year to run Facebook.
Zuckerberg faces congressional grilling over Facebook user privacy, 2016 election Zuckerberg to Congress: Allowing data breach, foreign interference 'a big mistake' Steve Wozniak speaks out about quitting Facebook: 'I'm just tired of all the ads'3. "The Social Network," the Oscar-winning movie about Facebook's early days, premiered in 2010. The film starred Jesse Eisenberg as Zuckerberg and was written by Aaron Sorkin, who won the adapted screenwriting Academy Award for the movie.
4. He is married to Priscilla Chan, whom he met at Harvard, and they have two kids.
5. He's known for wearing jeans, sneakers and a fitted gray T-shirt, adding a hoodie if the weather demands. In 2009, he wore a tie every day, the first of what would become his yearly "personal challenges."
6. Zuckerberg is the 7th richest person in the world with a net worth of more than $63 billion, according to Forbes.
7. He owns 700 acres of land on Kauai Island, Hawaii, which he bought in 2014 for $100 million, Forbes reported.
8. He guest-starred as himself on an episode of "The Simpsons."
9. Zuckerberg's personal challenge for 2018 is to fix Facebook. Previous challenges included visiting every U.S. state and building a simple artificial intelligence to run his home, which he named Jarvis after the "Iron Man" character.
10. Last year, Facebook said Russian-linked content may have reached 126 million Americans with roughly 3,000 ads purchased by the Internet Research Agency, a troll farm. The ads promoted fake Facebook pages, which produced 80,000 pieces of content between January 2015 and August 2017. Facebook has responded by adding 10,000 employees to its security team and increasing levels of advertising transparency.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.