Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Cox was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and raised in Winnetka, Illinois. He is the youngest of three children. He attended New Trier High School, [1] and then enrolled in Stanford University where he dropped out of the symbolic systems graduate degree program to join Facebook in 2005. [2] [3] [4]

  2. Chris Cox. Chris Cox is chief product officer at Meta, leading its apps and technologies. After earning his bachelor’s degree in symbolic systems from Stanford University in 2004, Chris joined Meta, then called Facebook, in 2005 as a software engineer and helped build the first versions of key Facebook features, including News Feed.

    • Chief Product Officer
  3. Apr 26, 2019 · Roger Parloff. · Contributor. Updated Fri, Apr 26, 2019, 12:00 AM. In late 2003, during his senior year at Stanford, Chris Cox, the future Chief Product Officer at Facebook ( FB ), embarked on a ...

    • 6 min
    • Roger Parloff
    • Chris Cox (manager)1
    • Chris Cox (manager)2
    • Chris Cox (manager)3
    • Chris Cox (manager)4
    • Chris Cox (manager)5
  4. June 11, 2020, 11:28 AM PDT. By Dylan Byers. Chris Cox, one of Facebook's earliest engineers, is returning to the social media giant as chief product officer more than a year after he left amid ...

  5. Chief Product Officer. Chris Cox is chief product officer at Meta, leading its apps and technologies. After earning his bachelor’s degree in symbolic systems from Stanford University in 2004, Chris joined Meta, then called Facebook, in 2005 as a software engineer and helped build the first versions of key Facebook features, including News ...

  6. Feb 7, 2021 · Facebook executive Chris Cox had just returned to the company on June 11 after an abrupt departure in March 2019. One of Facebook’s earliest employees, the chief product officer was widely ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Chris Cox is chief product officer at Meta, leading its apps and technologies. After earning his bachelor’s degree in symbolic systems from Stanford University in 2004, Chris joined Meta, then called Facebook, in 2005 as a software engineer and helped build the first versions of key Facebook features, including News Feed.