The acquisition of Windsurf by Google for $2.4 billion has stirred controversy in Silicon Valley, particularly regarding the distribution of funds. While VCs (Greenoaks, Kleiner Perkins, General Catalyst) and the co-founders (Varun Mohan, Douglas Chen) benefited significantly, many of Windsurf's 250 employees were left without a payout.
Google split the payment into two $1.2 billion portions: one for investors and one for employee compensation. Investors saw returns of about 4x their original funding. Greenoaks made approximately $500 million on their $65 million investment, and Kleiner Perkins returned about 3x its invested capital.
Approximately 200 Windsurf employees not hired by Google did not receive a payout, despite the company retaining over $100 million in capital. This decision has drawn criticism, with some suggesting the funds could have been used to compensate all employees. Some Google-hired employees had their stock grants revoked and vesting timelines reset.
Vinod Khosla criticized Windsurf's founders for not sharing the proceeds with the team. Following the Google deal, Windsurf's remaining entity was acquired by Cognition, allowing all remaining employees to benefit financially. Cognition reportedly paid $250 million for Windsurf’s IP and product.