CNNMoney looks at the people who make up the biggest investors in Facebook.
What did Larry Summers really think of the Winklevoss twins?
Several billion years from now, scientists predict that the universe may end in heat death. That looks like the only thing that will kill off the Winklevoss twins' legal crusade against Facebook.
Litigation has come to an end, decrees the latest judge
Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss must accept their $65 million settlement from Facebook and move on.
The Winklevoss twins tell Piers Morgan they use Facebook, but see no problem with it because they say it was their idea.
The long, sordid legal saga between Facebook and the much-maligned Winklevoss twins may finally be over.
In addition to the expected cluster of cast members, random celebrities (Kevin Spacey, Adrien Brody, Gina Gershon), and assorted hangers-on, a pair of Olympic athletes were present for last week's New York premiere of The Social Network. Of course, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss had a particularly compelling reason to attend the festivities: The 29-year-old twins, who finished sixth in the coxless pair crew event at the 2008 Beijing Summer Games, were Harvard undergrads when they created the social networking site ConnectU.