Following his inauguration, President Donald Trump unveiled what he calls “the largest AI infrastructure project in history.” Dubbed Stargate, the $500 billion joint venture between OpenAI, Oracle (ORCL),
Oracle has partnered with Elon Musk's Starlink to boost its Enterprise Communications Platform (ECP) with high-speed communication. This integration ensures reliable access to video, audio streaming,
Some of the most exclusive seats at President Donald Trump’s inauguration were reserved for powerful tech CEOs who also are among the world’s richest men.
ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, is required to sell the app to a U.S.-based buyer or face a nationwide ban.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman called Stargate, “the most important project for this era” and promised that all of the new investment his company was making would help cure diseases. Altman was actually prompted by Trump to talk about the medical advances that AI would supposedly figure out.
Elon Musk is already casting doubt on OpenAI’s new, up to $500 billion investment deal with SoftBank (SFTBY) and Oracle (ORCL), despite ... and the pair of billionaires have a longtime friendship.
DeepSeek says its AI model is similar to US giants like OpenAI, despite fears of censorship around issues sensitive to Beijing
In this article, we are going to take a look at where Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL ... feud between Musk and Altman reached uncharted waters of the White House as the tech billionaires try ...
Even so, Mr Ellison remains the world’s fifth-richest man, and Oracle the third-biggest software firm. He has a thing or two to teach fellow tech titans, in particular his friend Elon Musk, about staying power.
Sources tell WIRED that the OPM’s top layers of management now include individuals linked to xAI, Neuralink, the Boring Company, and Palantir. One expert found the takeover reminiscent of Stalin.
The richest man in the world is backing far-right parties against a political establishment that has failed to deliver.
In the past, the EU has not hesitated to try to apply European law to tech companies. Over the past decade, for example, Google has faced three fines totaling more than $8 billion for breaking antitrust law (though one of these fines was overturned by the EU’s General Court in 2024).