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Why a shareholder is fighting a battle to revamp Facebook's share structure that she admits she can't win

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Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Reuters
Business Insider

Dual class share structures, which ensure that a small group of company insiders have majority voting control, are all the rage among Internet companies. Facebook does it, Google does it (actually Google has three classes of shares), and LinkedIn does it. 

But one small but vocal shareholder says it's time for the practice to end.

Boston-based Northstar Asset Management has filed shareholder proposals with Facebook and Google, asking the companies to overhaul their share structure so that every share of the company is good for one vote.
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It's a futile battle, as Northstar CEO Julie Goodridge is the first to admit.

"We can't possibly get a majority, unless Mark Zuckerberg votes in favor of our resolution, and I don't think he's going to," says Goodridge, of the proposal to revamp Facebook's share structure. 

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The reason NorthStar can't win is because shareholders need to vote on her proposal and Facebook has the majority of the voting power — which is the whole point of dual-class shares in the first place.

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