The paradise islands of Hawaii has long been popular with honeymooners, surfers and billionaires seeking stunning surroundings and seclusion, including no other than Silicon Valley's slickest resident Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook.
#Kauai #Hawaii#BeachLife #Paradise #TropicalLife
— Starship 21ZNA9 (@DeeZeeX) January 19, 2017
🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴 🌴
📷 @ErikMcRitchie pic.twitter.com/1PoJrcecgy
Not so long ago, Mr. Zuckerberg paid US$100 million for 700 acres of beach on Kauai two years ago to create a private island hideaway for his family.
Check out the latest #ThirdWaveBook buzz by ER's Majority Owner + Chairman @SteveCase. Hawaii is his hideaway. Where's yours? pic.twitter.com/ImYOwdPtit
— Exclusive Resorts (@ExclusiveResrts) January 16, 2017
However, according to local newspaper, Honolulu Star Advertiser, the area of land that Mr. Zuckerberg bought isn't quite as peaceful, tranquil and as private as he might of thought.
Facebook’s Zuckerberg sues to force land sales https://t.co/IUPdP7Hk5j #kauai #realestate
— Hawaii Information (@HiInformation) January 19, 2017
Small pockets within the Kauai area are in fact owned by Kamaaina families who have rights to walk on what Mark Zuckerberg thought was private property.
But here's where the real-live movie script becomes more interesting.
I may or may not have cried a lot during #Moana. It was so beautiful and made me feel my ancestors. pic.twitter.com/CDPYZU8BOK
— Asleep and Dreaming (@EricaERucker) January 14, 2017
The billionaire owner of Facebook, one of the richest men in the world, is reportedly filing lawsuits to force the families to sell land that has belonged to them for generations at auction, called quiet title actions.
"Quiet title actions are the standard and prescribed process to identify all potential co-owners, determine ownership, and ensure that, if there are other co-owners, each receives appropriate value for their ownership share," Keoni Skultz, a partner at Honolulu law firm Cades Schutte, representing Mr. Zuckerberg said in an email to the newspaper.
It's reported the Facebook billionaire paid US$56 million for half of the estate in 2014, which is now worth US$18 million, according to local valuers.
Privacy, it seems, is no fairy tale, and does indeed come at a cost.