Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the social media company plans to spend as much as $65 billion this year alone to build on its artificial intelligence efforts.
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.
It took less than two years for Nvidia to add more than $3 trillion in market value and become Wall Street's most-valuable publicly traded company. However, the arrival of DeepSeek reminds investors that next-big-thing technologies have an ominous early stage track record.
US chipmaker Nvidia has suffered the largest stock market slump in history after the emergence of an advanced Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) model raised doubts about its technology.
A breakthrough Chinese chatbot has sparked alarm about the country’s advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and wiped close to $1 trillion off global stock markets...
Kelly Woodham of Georgetown has seen the same AI-generated image of a quilt in a shared Facebook group we’re both members of. The group, History of Kentucky, is your run of the mill Facebook group with posts focusing on Kentucky history.
Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek claims to have developed an AI assistant with performance comparable to leading Western models like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini but at a fraction of the cost.
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been bullish on AI for years but in its Q4 earnings call he stated 2025 will be a landmark year.
Social media is largely powered by tech, and nowadays, AI is having a significant impact on social media algorithms.
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.
On the political landscape, tech made the biggest pivot. Amid threats of heavy regulation and even being broken up under Biden, Silicon Valley has embraced Donald Trump’s administration. The likes of Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook, Open AI’s Sam Altman and of course Elon Musk, all at the centre of power through last week’s inauguration.
On the political landscape, tech has made the biggest pivot. Amid threats of heavy regulation and even being broken up under Biden, Silicon Valley has embraced Donald Trump’s administration. The likes of Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook, Open AI’s Sam Altman and of course Elon Musk, were all at the centre of power at last week’s inauguration.