Technology | Facebook Facebook 'Unsure' if Zuck Sold Site Years Ago Case appears before judge for the first time By Kevin Spak Posted Jul 21, 2010 10:05 AM CDT Copied Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talks about the social network site's new privacy settings, Wednesday, May 26, 2010, in Palo Alto, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) A lawyer for Facebook says she’s “unsure” whether a freshman Mark Zuckerberg signed away the rights to the site for $1,000. New York investor Paul Ceglia produced a contract in court yesterday that he said Zuckerberg had signed back in 2003, giving Ceglia a growing stake in a site called “The Face Book.” Facebook hasn’t called the contract a phony, but lawyer Lisa Simpson (really) said the company had “serious questions” about it, Bloomberg reports. “Whether he signed this piece of paper, we’re unsure at this moment,” Simpson told the judge. Ceglia sued Facebook on June 30, saying that thanks to the contract he was entitled to 84% of the company. He says Zuckerberg pitched him the “fledgling project” when Ceglia contracted him to code a different site. Ceglia’s lawyer declined to say why he’d waited nine years to follow the suit. (Maybe because it didn't have 500 million users in 2001, a milestone reached this morning.) Read These Next Kristi Noem won't like this Wall Street Journal exposé. Au pair struck a deal to walk free in murder case. She got 10 years. Jeanine Pirro is suing her own hometown after she fell in the street. Trump grants wave of pardons to ex-NFL players. Report an error