|
DENVER (AP) - The higher gasoline prices go, the more money business Web entrepreneur Jason Toews makes.
He started an Internet site, GasBuddy.com, in 2000 to track daily gasoline prices using volunteers to e-mail what they find. "Hardly anybody ever used it," Toews, of Brooklyn Park, Minn., recalled.
By 2004, 1 million people were visiting the site daily, although the numbers dropped when prices went down.
|
|