The giant growth of bitumen makes two brothers billionaire

The Kryptonal investor Cameron Winklevoss sees bitumen as a multi-dollar fortune. Winklevoss and his brother Tyler previously indicted Mark Zuckerberg in an attempt to gain control of Facebook, and then invested their profit in bitumen. “Afatt long, directly, is a multi-dollar value I don't know [...]
Winklevoss and his brother Tyler previously indicted Mark Zuckerberg in an attempt to gain control of Facebook, and then invested their profit in bitumen.
“Afatt long, directly, is a multi-dollar value I don't know how long it takes to get there”, Cameron Winklevoss said. He rejected some analysts' suggestion that the rapid growth of shale plants in recent months is a bubble.
“Social Networks rise in exponential value based on the number of users and participants. The difference between one and 100 is dramatic 100 and one million is much more dramatic and exciting. The more people join him, he earns more,” he added.
When asked if people should invest in something they don't understand, Winklevoss said it's not a problem. “Most people do not know how the internet works, but they are satisfied using it,” he noted.
In 2008, Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss faced trial with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, over the claim that he stole their idea of Facebook social network.
The brothers used their winnings that they had won in court to invest in bitumen, and recently they have become the first billionaires to make it through this cryptovalute./Periscopi/












