Love it or hate it, by now you’re likely immune to seeing multiple posts pop up each day on Twitter and Facebook of friends participating in the Ice Bucket Challenge to raise money and awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). But the act of people pouring buckets of ice water over their heads doesn’t stop with your old college roommate and that guy on your newsfeed you don’t remember friending. The challenge has now circulated through celebrities and entire companies, and the Boston tech community has been busy getting in on the action.

Since the challenge stemmed from the Bay State, it’s only fitting that Boston techies have taken on the nominations and donated money to the cause in the process. Check out these Hub-based companies getting wet for a good cause, along with some major tech giants from Apple, Amazon and Facebook.

The team behind advertising technology company Jebbit doused themselves on August 14 for the effort:

(Editor’s Note: Lauren Landry here — the very BostInno employee Jebbit Co-founder Tom Coburn mentioned in the above video. Prior to being called out, 83 percent of our team had already accepted the challenge and is still trying to shake off the chill. That said, the rest of you 17 percent — looking at you, BostInno Beat — better do what Jebbit says. Everyone else reading? Donate.)

Post-soak, the team also nominated DrizlyThe Boston-born alcohol delivery app accepted the challenge and donated $5 to the ALS fund for every delivery they made on the weekend of the 15th.

The boozy-minded team was also nominated by Tablelist, the startup that gets you access to clubs and lounges around the city:

… who went on to challenge Uber Boston. The private car and ridesharing service went out on the (windy) Boston Harbor to complete their nomination.

The social network giant founded in our own backyard also stepped up to the challenge over the weekend. Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg accepted a nomination from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Zuckerberg went on to nominate Microsoft Co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates, who devised an overly-complicated dunking contraption for the simple challenge and finished it in business casual clothing. For dramatic effect, slo-mo is also used.

Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos inflated a kiddie pool on stage at the company’s Seattle all-hands meeting last week for the challenge. After a lengthy intro, and throwback pictures of William Shatner and Patrick Stewart, Bezos takes the plunge:

And it wouldn’t be a tech trend unless the Cupertino company got in on it. Apple CEO Tim Cook was next under the ice, shown here:

Monday at 5 p.m., North Quincy-based Granite Telecommunications will also be participating in a company-wide Ice Bucket Challenge. Granite will donate $100 for every employee who participates, with 850 already signed up.

The event will in-part honor Corey Griffin, former Boston VC and friend of the company who passed away this weekend in Nantucket, after helping raise money for the challenge. Griffin helped Granite arrange the event.

Currently, it is estimated by the ALS Association that the now wildly-popular #IceBucketChallenge has raised $9.5 million for ALS research. This is a prime example of the new “hashtag activism” trend of the viral age. And with no sign of the challenge dying down, much more money has yet to be raised for research.

So get your buckets ready, techies, because you could be the next one nominated.