Meta’s chief executive has become a more visible presence in Washington since President Trump’s return to office after years of avoiding politics.
Mark Zuckerberg said this year will be a "defining" year for AI, announcing plans to spend over $60-$65 billion in capital expenditures.
Mark Zuckerberg is “genuinely scared” of being jailed by Donald Trump, according to a leading politics expert, while White House sources say the Meta boss must do “more ass-kissng” in his bid to impress the new president.
Stay diversified, please: Billionaire investor and Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio was full of investing wisdom when he showed up to an Opening Bid taping late in the evening. Dalio was game on, voicing concerns on US debt levels and stock valuations. I point-blank asked Dalio how someone could go about becoming a better investor.
Venture capitalist and early Facebook investor Jim Breyer said Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been energized by his company’s recent push into AI.
Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince says the Trump administration should make cybersecurity defenses mission critical.
According to the original plans to host the event outside, the industry leaders were supposed to be seated on dais with Donald Trump's family members and others The world's richest billionaires ...
U.S. President Trump is to speak to an international audience for the first time after returning into the White House with a speech and Q&A by video conference to the World Economic Forum’s ...
Leading business and political figures attending the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, have discussed and debated topics such as technology, tariffs, climate change, Ukraine, Gaza and the global economy this week.
Now, over the course of just six weeks, Meta has dismantled diversity programs, including supplier diversity, that took years to build, and Mark Zuckerberg has attributed them to former COO Sheryl Sandberg as he distances himself from all DEI.
This is going to be a big year,” said Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg on his newfound chumminess with the White House and host of technical AI advances.
But what stays with me isn’t the overwrought antipathy between Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, the tetchy tech titans who, in the summer of 2023, made noises — let’s call them grunts — about demonstrating their reciprocal disdain by squaring off and throwing down on the kind of stage used for Ultimate Fighting Championship events.