Meta Platforms Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg defended the company’s ambitious spending plans, predicting a “really big year” in which its artificial intelligence assistant will become the most widely used in the industry.
Meta Platforms Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said his company will invest between $60 billion and $65 billion in capital expenditures related to artificial intelligence in 2025, well above the figure analysts had been projecting.
Stephen Miller told Zuckerberg that the billionaire mogul had “an opportunity to help reform America, but it would be on Trump’s terms.”
Mark Zuckerberg is targeting Meta's low performers ... promised "generous severance" in line with previous rounds of layoffs, per Bloomberg. It's the latest round of cuts in Zuckerberg's self-proclaimed efficiency drive. In 2023, the CEO declared a ...
Mark Zuckerberg. La empresa pretende utilizar los fondos para construir un centro de datos “tan grande que cubriría una parte importante de Manhattan”, señaló Zuckerberg en una publicación ...
Mark Zuckerberg is ready to put tens of billions of dollars toward making Meta (META) an artificial intelligence leader this year.
Mark Zuckerberg is making a statement – on his wrist. The Meta CEO recently appeared in a Facebook video wearing the ultraexclusive Greubel Forsey Hand Made 1, a luxury timepiece that costs over $900,
DeepSeek AI, a cost-effective language model from China, outshines ChatGPT with fewer resources and lower costs. The tech-sector giants collectively experienced a loss of $94 billion in wealth, accounting for about 85% of the total drop in the Bloomberg index.
Financial writer discusses Warren Buffett's sales of Apple Inc., Zuckerberg's criticism, and the impact on AAPL's stock post-Trump's victory. Click for our updated.
(Bloomberg) -- Meta Platforms Inc. plans to ... Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said Friday. The company intends to use the funds to build a data center “so large that it would cover ...
Wall Street got a hard slap after the bell on Jan. 29 when Tesla, Meta, and Microsoft dropped their earnings reports, each showing numbers that didn’t hit the targets analysts had set. Investors saw their hopes crash as three of the biggest tech giants struggled on multiple fronts—electric vehicles,
Stocks closed lower Wednesday after the Federal Reserve left its key interest rate unchanged amid persistent inflation, as investors prepared for a slew of earnings reports from major technology companies.