Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek is stirring up anxiety in Silicon Valley after launching a new AI model that appears to rival leading AI ventures in the U.S. for a fraction
Mark Zuckerberg said this year will be a "defining" year for AI, announcing plans to spend over $60-$65 billion in capital expenditures.
In a meeting with Meta employees on Thursday, Mr. Zuckerberg also doubled down on recent changes to the company’s online speech policies and ending its diversity initiatives.
A Chinese artificial-intelligence company has Silicon Valley raving, calling it "amazing and impressive,"despite working with less-advanced chips.
TikTok users blamed Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for TikTok going dark in the US overnight.
This isn’t innovation it’s exploitation. Big Tech uses AI to scrape copyrighted works, blame China, erode creators’ rights, all under the guise of global competitiveness
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg expects to spend as much as $65 billion on AI in 2025 as part of a “massive effort” to further the company’s AI ambitions. Part of the plan includes a Louisiana data center that Zuckerberg says “is so large it would cover a significant part of Manhattan,” he wrote on Threads today.
The recent blackout offered ordinary Americans a chance to meaningfully connect with Chinese counterparts on another app.
Trump loves the reciprocal trade framework … and he loves this [idea],” a source said of the president’s plan for joint ventures.
China AI startup DeepSeek just released its R-1 model that compares favorably with OpenAI's o1 reasoning model. DeepSeek claims to have trained R1 at a fraction of the cost of o1 and Meta's Llama 3.1.
Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman and many more—one was missing: Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive of chip company Nvidia. He is spending time t