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  1. In April 2020, Milner Foundation announced a donation of 3 million face masks for people of Israel. Yuri Milner in his open letter published by Calcalist wrote that “a significant fraction of these masks will go to organizations providing essential services, whose frontline workers are still required to do their jobs during the lockdown”.

  2. Iouri Borissovitch (Bentsionovitch) Milner 1 (en russe : Юрий Борисович (Бенционович) Мильнер, né le 30 novembre 1960 à Moscou, est un entrepreneur, capital-risqueur et milliardaire russe (jusqu'en 2022) et israélien. Sur la liste du magazine Fortune listant les cinquante plus éminentes personnalités du monde ...

  3. Yuri Milner. Awards and Recognition. Yuri came in at number 52 on Forbes’ 2018 Midas List of the best dealmakers in hi-tech and life sciences venture capital. In 2017 Forbes celebrated its centenary by publishing 100 Greatest Living Business Minds – “an A-to-Z encyclopedia of ideas from 100 entrepreneurs, visionaries and prophets of ...

  4. Yuri graduated from university in 1985 with an advanced degree in theoretical physics and subsequently conducted research in quantum field theory, before going to the United States to study at Wharton School of Business. After becoming convinced that internet was the future of investment, Yuri founded Mail. ru Group in 1999; and under his ...

  5. Yuri began his career as a theoretical physicist, and science remains his great passion. In 2012 he and his wife Julia, together with Sergey Brin, Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg, and Anne Wojcicki, launched the Breakthrough Prizes – the world’s largest scientific awards, honoring important, primarily recent, achievements in Fundamental Physics, Life Sciences and Mathematics.

  6. 17 de abr. de 2016 · Según contó el propio Milner en una entrevista con la revista Time en 2015, sus padres lo llamaron Yuri en honor al astronauta ruso y primer hombre en llegar al espacio, en 1961.

  7. Eureka Manifesto. A book about humanity’s place in the Universe and our role in its future, by Yuri Milner. Any organization that is serious about doing something significant has a mission. But human civilization, as a whole, has nothing resembling a shared mission. In the long term, that means we cannot thrive — or probably even survive.