To protest their boss Mark Zuckerberg and his recent company-wide changes, Meta employees are reportedly sneaking tampons back in men’s bathrooms in its offices. But it isn’t the only tech company seeing some resistance amid Trump 2.
Meta Platforms plans to spend as much as $65 billion this year to expand its AI infrastructure, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on Friday, aiming to bolster the company's position against rivals OpenAI and Google in the race to dominate the technology.
Trump filed lawsuits against Twitter Inc, now known as X, Facebook Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google, as well as their chief executives in July 2021, alleging they unlawfully silence conservative viewpoints.
The Silicon Valley giant was criticized for giving away its core A.I. technology two years ago for anyone to use. Now that bet is having an impact.
MSNBC’s ‘All In with Chris Hayes’ host and ‘The Sirens’ Call’ author Chris Hayes joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the role of technology companies have played on the political divide in the U.S., how the companies have developed products that significantly reduce attention spans,
Along with these “memories,” Meta AI on Facebook, Messenger, and Instagram will deliver “a greater level of personalization” using information from your accounts on each platform, including your age, gender, and “interests based on your activity,” according to Meta’s support page.
Following $500 billion Project Stargate launch, Meta is also dolling out the dollars Meta's $65 billion is lower than Microsoft's $80 billion commitment AWS is set to spend more than $75 billion while Google has yet to say how much it will spend If you have a few hundred billion dollars burning a hole in your pocket,
The former Meta and YouTube executive will oversee a team of engineers focused on digital products and platforms
Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg plans to focus this year on getting back to ‘OG Facebook,’ here’s what that means per the CEO.
The line between dividend stocks and non-dividend tech stocks is now blurrier than ever, as 71% of the Magnificent 7 now pay dividends.
Andre Rohe, formerly with Meta, YouTube and Google, has been hired to lead Disney Entertainment and ESPN's product engineering team.