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Idealab Chief Executive Officer Bill Gross poses in Pasadena, California in this July 8, 2008 file photo. Gross' company, Idealab, created a slew of Web businesses in the 1990s, including pay-per-click advertising pioneer GoTo.com and online toy retailer eToys, which he said eventually "outspent its leash."
Idealab Chief Executive Officer Bill Gross poses in Pasadena, California in this July 8, 2008 file photo. Gross' company, Idealab, created a slew of Web businesses in the 1990s, including pay-per-click advertising pioneer GoTo.com and online toy retailer eToys, which he said eventually "outspent its leash."
This photo supplied by Spink Shreves Galleries shows a rare, single mint stamp from Iceland issued in 1897. The stamp, from the collection of Wall Street bond trader Bill Gross, will be auctioned by Spink Shreves Galleries in New York. All proceeds from the collection's sale are to be donated to the Millennium Villages Project at the Earth Institute at Columbia University; which provides things like seeds; fertilizer; bed nets to fight malaria and funding for schools; medical clinics and clean water.
A rare stamp on an absentee ballot envelope (TOP/2R) is displayed 13 November 2006 at a Broward County election office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
A rare stamp on an absentee ballot envelope (TOP/2R) is displayed 13 November 2006 at a Broward County election office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
A rare stamp on an absentee ballot envelope (TOP/2R) is displayed 13 November 2006 at a Broward County election office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
A rare stamp on an absentee ballot envelope is displayed through a magnifying glass 13 November 2006 at a Broward county election office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
A rare stamp on an absentee ballot envelope is displayed through a magnifying glass 13 November 2006 at a Broward County election office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
A Broward county election official holds up an absentee ballot envelope 13 November 2006 with an extremely rare stamp for the 07 November congressional election 13 November 2006 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The 1918 Inverted Jenny stamp, which takes its name from an image of a World War I-era airplane accidentally printed upside-down, turned up in Fort Lauderdale where election officials were inspecting ballots from parts of south Florida. In October 2005, a block of four Inverted Jennys stamps was purchased by US financier Bill Gross for USD 2,970,000. Experts say the stamp could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. AFP PHOTO/Roberto Schmidt (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)