1. Chris Hughes
One of the co-founders of Facebook, Hughes left the company in 2007 to become director of online organizing for Barack Obama's first presidential campaign. In 2010, the entrepreneur founded Juno, a social network aimed at connecting users interested in social good and activism.
Currently, Hughes is the publisher and editor in chief of The New Republic, a progressive political commentary magazine.Hughes married partner Sean Eldridge, president of investment fund Hudson River Ventures and LGBT equality advocate, in June 2012.
2. Peter Sisson

3. Peter Thiel
Best known for co-founding PayPal and working as its CEO, Thiel is also a successful venture capitalist and hedge fund manager. When eBay acquired PayPal in 2002, Thiel's stake was estimated around $55 million.
He also made the first outside investment in Facebook in 2004, securing a 10.2% stake for $500,000.
As an openly gay advocate of LGBT causes, Thiel has contributed to the American Foundation for Equal Rights and GOProud
He also made the first outside investment in Facebook in 2004, securing a 10.2% stake for $500,000.
As an openly gay advocate of LGBT causes, Thiel has contributed to the American Foundation for Equal Rights and GOProud
4. Megan Smith
Smith is the VP of business development at Google. She has been with the company over 15 years, starting when PlanetOut partnered with Google in 1998. Smith acted as CEO at PlanetOut, an entertainment and media company targeting the LGBT community.
Smith and her wife, journalist Kara Swisher, have two young sons, Louie and Alex.
5. Dana Contreras
Contreras started working at Twitter two and a half years ago. She quickly climbed the company ladder to become a senior systems engineer.
As a transgender woman, Contreras finds Twitter as welcoming and supportive a workplace as they come.
Contreras married her wife Melissa five years ago, before she gender-transitioned.
6. Tom Coates
Hailed as one of the earliest webloggers on the Internet, Coates operated award-winning new media blog plastigbag.org until mid-2011, around the time he resigned from Yahoo. He also organized London's Hack Day in 2007, and advises several startups, including Lanyrd.
7. Joel Simkhai
In 2009, Simkhai (left) founded Grindr, arguably the most popular dating and social network for gay and bisexual men. The company boasts over 4 million users in 192 countries.
Initially, Simkhai faced self-doubt as a gay man in business. "One of my problems was I thought I couldn't be as successful," Simkhai told Inc. "That's partially because I didn't have any gay role models who were very successful and in high-profile jobs."
8. Jason Goldberg
Founder and CEO of Fab.com, Goldberg initially launched the property as a social network for gay people before transitioning the company to a design inspiration and ecommerce site.
Goldberg and business partner Brian Ellner also launched a site called The Four 2012, which pioneers gay marriage equality through social media efforts.
Goldberg married husband Christian Schoenherr in August 2012 in New York City.
9. Jon Hall
Jon "Maddog" Hall is the executive director of Linux International, a non-profit that promotes Linux-based open source software development.
He earned the nickname "Maddog" as a professor at Hartford State Technical College, where he also served as computer science department head.
According to Out magazine, Hall was inspired to come out on the 100th anniversary of mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing's birth. “I explained to people who wondered why I came out online that there are a lot of young geeks who are going through the same thing,” he said. “And I wanted to let them know they were not alone, and that it gets better.”