Richard "Rich" Skrenta (born 1967 (age 49–50) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is a computer programmer and Silicon Valley entrepreneur who created the web search engine blekko.
In 1967, Skrenta was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, North America.
In 1982, at age 15, as a high school student at Mt. Lebanon High School, Skrenta wrote the Elk Cloner virus that infected Apple II machines. It is widely believed to have been one of the first large-scale self-spreading personal computer viruses ever created.
Skrenta graduated from Northwestern University.
Between 1989 and 1991, Skrenta worked at Commodore Business Machines with Amiga Unix.
In 1989, Skrenta started working on a multiplayer simulation game. In 1994, it was launched under the name Olympia as a pay-for-play PBEM game by Shadow Island Games.
Between 1991 and 1995, Skrenta worked at Unix System Labs and from 1996 to 1998 with IP-level encryption at Sun Microsystems. He later left Sun and became one of the founders of DMOZ. He stayed on board after the Netscape acquisition, and continued to work on the directory as well as Netscape Search, AOL Music, and AOL Shopping.
After his stint at AOL, Skrenta went on to cofound Topix LLC, a Web 2.0 company in the news aggregation & forums market.