Joseph Malchow

Joseph Malchow is an American entrepreneur who cofounded the company Publir.

Background

Malchow was born in Princeton, New Jersey and grew up in Scotch Plains, New Jersey.[1] At 16 he founded JetWare, a software company that developed and sold to consumers applications for Palm OS-powered mobile devices. JetWare's products included Studentmate, which was among the first mobile applications intended for use in the academic environment. The New York Times covered JetWare and Malchow as innovators in mobile computing.[2] Malchow attended Dartmouth College, where he graduated as a James O. Baker Presidential Scholar. At Dartmouth, Malchow led a campaign that placed four independent directors on the Board of Trustees of Dartmouth College.[3][4][5] Malchow's involvement was profiled in a 2008 Dartmouth Alumni Magazine article by Jake Tapper.[6]

Malchow later discussed this episode in an extended article coauthored with First Amendment attorney Harvey A. Silverglate.[7]

In 2007 The Wall Street Journal named Malchow a Robert L. Bartley fellow.[8] He has continued to publish regularly in The Wall Street Journal.[9]

After Dartmouth, Malchow worked with semiconductor pioneer T.J. Rodgers from 2008 to 2010. In 2010 he cofounded Publir, a digital advertising exchange reaching 35 million Americans each month and focusing on providing premium programmatic advertisements to intellectual publications ranging from The Atlantic to Real Clear Politics. Because of its wide reach and influential participants, Publir is one of the largest invitation-only ad exchanges in the U.S. Digital media properties published by Malchow or monetized by companies he founded reach an average monthly audience of 35 million.

Malchow was named to the board of directors of the National Civic Art Society in 2018, alongside Roger Scruton. According to Architectural Record, in January 2020, President Donald J. Trump drafted an Executive Order "to ensure that 'the classical architectural style shall be the preferred and default style' for new and upgraded federal buildings."[10] The reforms, which were addressed to the General Services Administration, were publicly connected with NCAS.

Malchow is an active venture investor and an advisor to technology companies.[11] He is the publisher of Power Line.[12]

In 2012, Forbes named Malchow to its 30 Under 30 list. [13]

Education

Malchow holds an A.B. from Dartmouth College and a J.D. from Stanford Law School.

See also

References

  1. Sheldon, Linzi. "Wall Street Journal selects Dartmouth junior Joseph Malchow as a 2007 Bartley Fellow", Dartmouth News, April 11, 2007. Accessed March 16, 2015. "Dartmouth junior Joseph Malchow has been chosen as a 2007 Bartley fellow, winning a paid summer internship at The Wall Street Journal.... Malchow, a native of Scotch Plains, N.J., is a government major and prospective English major at Dartmouth."
  2. Greene, Catherine. "They've Got the World in their Palms". The New York Times.
  3. Schemo, Diana. "Battle Over Board Structure at Dartmouth Raises Passions of Alumni". The New York Times.
  4. Sullivan, Brian. "Dartmouth Alumni Rebuff Board, Reject Voting Change". Bloomberg.
  5. Lewin, Tamar. "Dartmouth Alumni Battles Become a Spectator Sport". The New York Times.
  6. Tapper, Jake. "No Ordinary Joe" (PDF). Dartmouth Alumni Magazine.
  7. Malchow, Joseph. "Dartmouth College, the Battle Over Parity & the Legal Notion of Fiduciary Duty" (PDF).
  8. Adams, Roland. "Wall Street Journal selects Dartmouth junior Joseph Malchow as a 2007 Bartley Fellow". Dartmouth College.
  9. Malchow, Joseph. "Those Nonsensical 'Google Bus' Attacks". The Wall Street Journal.
  10. "Will the White House Order All Federal Architecture To Be Classical?". Architectural Record.
  11. "Notable Founder Profile". AngelList.
  12. "About us". powerlineblog.com. Power Line. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  13. "2012 30 Under 30". Forbes.
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