Anonymous bidder pays $610,000 for coffee with Apple's Tim Cook
An anonymous bidder paid $610,000 to chat over coffee with Apple's chief executive, according to online-auction site Charity Buzz, which began accepting bids about three weeks ago.
Tuesday's winning bid
came only several minutes before the auction closed at 4 pm ET. The
auction site had valued the meeting with Cook at $50,000.
Proceeds from the auction will go to The RFK Center for Justice and Human Rights, an international nonprofit founded as a memorial to Robert F. Kennedy by his family and friends.
The auction saw 86 bids, many of them from companies that do business (or want to do business) with Apple.
The coffee chat will
happen at Apple's Cupertino, California, headquarters. The winner may
bring along one guest. Travel and lodging for the visit, which will last
between 30 minutes and an hour, are not covered.
Visitors will be required
to sign a nondisclosure agreement and are subject to a security
screening. Also, they can't liveblog or tweet during their meeting.
The move fits in with the more open public persona
Cook has adopted since replacing late Apple CEO and co-founder Steve
Jobs. In the past 18 months Cook has met with members of Congress on
Capitol Hill and toured factories in China that make Apple products.
By some measures, a
$600,000 coffee meeting with the chief of the world's leading tech
company might be a bargain. An anonymous bidder paid $3.4 million last year for lunch with star investor Warren Buffett.
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