From 'Android Andy' to alleged 'sex ring' leader - the rise and fall of Google exec Andy Rubin
- Andy Rubin is the creator of Android and a former Google executive.
- Rubin's career seemed to be on track - software engineering in Silicon Valley in the 1990s, founding Android, being a top dog at Google for a decade - until he was let go from Google after a sexual misconduct investigation, according to multiple news reports.
- Rubin has been accused of having inappropriate relations with a subordinate, of allegedly coercing a woman into oral sex (an allegation that Rubin denies).
- And new, unsealed court documents from a suit filed by his estranged ex-wife allege he ran what was described as a "sex ring."
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Andy Rubin's fall from grace in the tech world has dragged out over two years.
The inventor of Android - the OS used by nearly 87% of world's smartphones - has had a 30-year career in software engineering in Silicon Valley. His life seemed to be on track as one of the heroes of the modern tech world until a set of explosive news reports from 2017 to 2019 characterized Rubin as an antagonist in the #MeToo movement.
Rubin's spokesperson calls these reports mischaracterizations, telling Business Insider:
"Much of the recent media coverage mischaracterized Andy's departure from Google and parroted fictional claims made about Andy by his ex-wife in their contentious divorce dispute. He looks forward to telling his story someday," the spokesperson said.
Read on for the rise and fall of "Android Andy."
Andy Rubin was raised in Chappaqua, New York and attended Horace Greeley High School, graduating in 1981.
Source: International Business Times
Mad Genius or Huge Nerd? 15 years old (1978), rocking a "software" tee-shirt and a bandage from exploding model rocket. pic.twitter.com/rOPfAvvuoT
— Andy Rubin (@Arubin) March 29, 2017He attended Utica College in New York, where he studied computer science, and graduated in 1986.
Source: International Business Times
Rubin's first job out of college was software engineering, specializing in robotics, at Carl Zeiss X-ray Microscopy in Thornwood, New York (1986-1988).
Source: LinkedIn
He spent a year in Geneva, Switzerland, working as a software engineer at the Société Genevoise d'Instruments de Physique (1988-1989).
Source: LinkedIn
But a fateful meeting with an Apple engineer in the Cayman Islands in 1989 would change Rubin's direction, sending him out West to Silicon Valley.
Rubin randomly met Apple engineer Bill Caswell on the beach in the Cayman Islands. Rubin offered Caswell, who had been kicked out of his vacation cottage by his girlfriend, a place to stay; Caswell offered Rubin a job at Apple.
Sources: Business Insider, New York Times
Rubin started as a software engineer at Apple in 1989.
Check out the Apple business card that Rubin posted on his LinkedIn (job description: "blockhead").
Source: LinkedIn
He joined General Magic, an Apple spinoff working on a handheld computing device, in 1992.
General Magic has a quiet fame in Silicon Valley: Forbes calls it "the most important dead company in Silicon Valley" and New York Magazine says it "invented the iPhone — two decades too early." The startup, then working on a precursor to the smartphone with an OS called "Magic Cap," was met with competition when Apple released its Newton PDA in 1993.
In an interview with New York Magazine, General Magic cofounder Andy Hertzfeld characterized the Newton as "an existential threat" and "a real betrayal" on the part of Apple CEO John Sculley, who was on General Magic's board of directors.
General Magic closed operations in 2002, but it brought together some of the 21st century's giants of Silicon Valley early in their careers. Employees included: Megan Smith (former VP at Google, former US CTO under President Barack Obama), Kevin Lynch (former CTO at Adobe, now VP of Technology at Apple), and of course, Andy Rubin.
The documentary "General Magic" premiered at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival.
Sources: Business Insider, New York Times, Forbes, New York Magazine, Tribeca, General Magic Documentary
Film makers @SarahKerruish & @Matt_Maude with Mike Stern and Dee Gardetti introducing the movie to an excited audience #generalmagicmovie pic.twitter.com/dNMVlnxayH
— General Magic (@generalmagicmov) July 27, 2018Rubin followed his General Magic colleagues to WebTV as manager of communications engineering in 1995.
General Magic's Steve Perlman and Phil Goldman founded WebTV with Bruce Leak. WebTV allowed consumers to access the Internet on their TVs. Microsoft acquired the company for $425 million in 1997, and it became MSN TV.
Sources: Business Insider, New York Times, Forbes, Wired,
Rubin founded his first company, Danger, in 1999 — and it invented the predecessor to the Sidekick.
The Hiptop had an app store and cloud storage. It also had its default web browser set to Google, which Google cofounder Larry Page deemed "cool" after finding out at a 2002 talk Rubin gave at Stanford about the device. Rubin left Danger in 2004.
Sources: LinkedIn, Wired, New York Times
And in a life-altering career step, Rubin founded Android in 2003.
Android's goal: create an open-source OS for cell phones. The company name came from the nickname "Android" that Rubin's colleagues at Apple gave him because of his robot obsession.
Sources: Business Insider
He incubated Android in the winter of 2004 at Redpoint Ventures, where he was the entrepreneur in residence.
He would return to the Menlo Park venture capital firm in 2015 as a venture partner, a capacity he served in until 2017.
Sources: LinkedIn, Business Insider, Bloomberg
#TBT 16 years ago this month...these guys cc @geoff_yang @tadhg108 @waleckaj pic.twitter.com/ZT2QIZQi2L
— Redpoint (@redpointvc) October 22, 2015Google acquired Android in 2005.
Android launched commercially in 2007.
Source: The Information, Verge
Rubin served as Google senior vice president of mobile and digital content for nearly a decade.
Rubin oversaw the Android division until 2013, when he moved over to the robotics department called "Replicant."
Sources: New York Times, Business Insider, LinkedIn
He left Google in the fall of 2014, with a public announcement from then Google CEO Larry Page that wished him "all the best."
Rubin said at the time he was leaving Google to start a tech incubator to help develop start-ups interested in building hardware.
Source: New York Times
In 2015, Rubin started his venture firm, Playground Global.
Google was one of the company's investors. Today, Playground Global's portfolio includes companies that have been bought by Intel and Amazon.
Sources: The Information, LinkedIn, Business Insider, Playground Global
His most recent startup was founded in 2016 and called Essential, a maker of Android smartphones.
Essential released the PH-1 smartphone in August 2017. Sales weren't stellar, and the price of the smartphone was reduced from $699 to $499 by October 2017.
Sources: LinkedIn, Business Insider, Business Insider
In 2017, Rubin's career began to unravel. In November 2017, The Information reported that Rubin left Google because "an internal investigation determined he had carried on an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate."
Reed Albergotti at The Information reported that the affair was with a woman who worked with Rubin in the Android division of Google, and that Google's HR recommended disciplinary action against Rubin.
Source: The Information
Rubin took a leave of absence from Essential around the time The Information article published but returned within two weeks.
An Essential spokesperson told the Information that Rubin requested a leave of absence "to deal with personal matters" earlier in the month at Essential's November board meeting.
Source:The Information, Recode
For the next year, Essential more or less plugged along.
In May 2018, Essential reportedly canceled plans for its next smartphone and reports circulated that it intended to sell itself; but, by October 2018 Rubin was thought to be working on a new smartphone that could automatically perform tasks like texting.
Sources: Business Insider, Business Insider
Then, The New York Times published a bombshell investigation in October 2018: It reported that Google paid Rubin a $90 million exit package in 2014, even after finding out that the woman Rubin had an affair with alleged that "he coerced her into performing oral sex in a hotel room in 2013."
Rubin denies that allegation.
The investigation by Daisuke Wakabayashi and Katie Benner also reported a slew of other details about Rubin's work relationships, based on anonymous sources. These include:
- "Security staff found bondage sex videos on Mr. Rubin's work computer," and Google responded by docking Rubin's bonus, the Times reported.
- Sources told the Times that he "berated subordinates as stupid or incompetent."
- He met his wife at Google and allegedly dated multiple women employed at Google during his marriage.
- The Times also reported that Rubin was one of three executives accused of sexual misconduct.
Sources: The New York Times, Business Insider
Rubin's exit package was complicated by a $150 million stock grant awarded to Rubin by Google at Larry Page's recommendation.
The New York Times also reported that Google's board of directors gave Rubin an "unusually generous sum" of $150 million for a stock grant just weeks into his sexual harassment investigation.
Historically, Google cofounder Larry Page recommends the value of these types of awards; the Times was unable to verify whether Page knew about Rubin's investigation at the time.
The Times called this massive stock grant an "enormous bargaining chip" in Rubin's negotiation of his exit package.
Source: The New York Times
Ex-wife Rie Hirabaru Rubin brought a civil-suit against Andy Rubin in October 2018, accusing him of having extramarital "ownership relationships."
According to The New York Times, Rie Hirabaru Rubin included a 2015 email from Andy Rubin to another woman saying "You will be happy being taken care of" and "being owned is kind like you are my property, and I can loan you to other people."
Sources: The New York Times,
The same day the New York Times investigation was published, Rubin Tweeted that the story contained "inaccuracies" about his employment and "wild exaggerations" about his compensation.
He maintained that he "never coerced a woman to have sex in a hotel room," and called the article's allegations as "part of a smear campaign to disparage me during a divorce and custody battle."
1/2 The New York Times story contains numerous inaccuracies about my employment at Google and wild exaggerations about my compensation. Specifically, I never coerced a woman to have sex in a hotel room. These false allegations are part of a smear campaign
— Andy Rubin (@Arubin) October 26, 20182/2 to disparage me during a divorce and custody battle. Also, I am deeply troubled that anonymous Google executives are commenting about my personnel file and misrepresenting the facts.
— Andy Rubin (@Arubin) October 26, 2018Google Employees organized a global walkout protesting the company's handling of instances of sexual misconduct, one week after the New York Times report.
Nearly 17,000 employees participated. Meanwhile, CEO Sundar Pichai was speaking at the New York Times DealBook conference in Manhattan.
"This anger and frustration within the company — we all feel it," Pichai said. "I feel it too. At Google we set a high bar and we clearly didn't live up to our expectations. The first thing is to acknowledge and apologize for past actions. Words alone aren't enough, you have to follow up with actions."
Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, Business Insider
In January 2019, a Google shareholder sued Alphabet's board for covering up instances of sexual harassment by Google executives.
The Rubin revelation was the driving force behind the legal action, the lawsuit said.
"Because of Rubin's importance to Google's financial results, he was treated differently than other employees by Google's Board and senior management," read the lawsuit. "He was given more deference and was lavished with compensation."
"This lawsuit simply repeats much of the recent media coverage, mischaracterizes Andy's departure from Google and sensationalizes claims made about Andy by his ex-wife," said Rubin's attorney Ellen Stross in a statement to The New York Times. "Andy acknowledges having had a consensual relationship with a Google employee. However, Andy strongly denies any misconduct, and we look forward to telling his story in court."
Source: New York Times, Bloomberg, Business Insider
In July 2019, Rubin's ex-wife accused him of running what was described as "a sex ring."
Buzzfeed was the first to share unsealed court documents that described a woman "M" working with Rubin in a "sex ring."
"M" would "agree to perform various sexual acts with multiple men" that would be filmed for "the enjoyment of Rubin and other men," after which point "off-camera" she would have sex with Rubin, these court documents allege.
According to Buzzfeed, the documents are part of a lawsuit brought against Andy Rubin by ex-wife Rie Hirabaru Rubin in a suit to invalidate her prenuptial agreement.
Andy Rubin's attorney Ellen Stross characterized Rie Hirabaru Rubin's lawsuit as a "garden-variety family law dispute involving a wife who regrets her decision to execute a prenuptial agreement" in a statement to Buzzfeed.
Source: BuzzFeed, Business Insider
Where is Andy Rubin now?
In the weeks following the sex ring revelation, Rubin has been quiet. He is still listed as Essential's CEO on the company's team page.
Read more: 41 photos of Amazon's incredible journey from the dot-com crash to a trillion-dollar company