The top billionaires of Silicon Valley have gone from supporting Democrats to being all in on Trump. What happened?
Some industry observers told ABC News that the ostensible softening toward Trump by big-tech corporations reflects a new business landscape that is both heavily influenced by the president-elect and increasingly defined by the development of energy-intensive artificial intelligence products.
(Reuters) - Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai is among the Big Tech leaders planning to attend U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration on Monday, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday. Apple's Tim Cook will also be attending the event, Bloomberg News reported earlier in the day.
Tuesday's edition of Forbes Daily covers Dana White joining Meta, Nvidia's stock jump, Bezos' robotics investments, medical debt changes, bird flu death and more.
The start of Trump 2.0 marks a new Frenemy Era for Big Tech.
The seats of honor reflect the friendly position the three richest men in the world have taken toward the second Trump administration.
That same month the Post's new publisher and CEO Will Lewis, a former editor of the British Daily Telegraph, issued a statement to staffers in the DC office about the paper's dire situation in terms of readership and finances. He ruffled feathers by telling journalists: 'People are not reading your stuff'.
Jensen Huang is expected to miss the ceremony, while Apple’s Tim Cook, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Tesla’s Elon Musk are attending.
Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos voiced confidence in the competitive landscape of the commercial space industry, despite President-elect Donald Trump's close ties with rival Elon Musk's SpaceX, as Blue Origin prepares for a pivotal rocket launch.
This week, The Post began trying out a new mission statement: “Riveting Storytelling for All of America.” After Donald J. Trump entered the White House in 2017, The Washington Post adopted a slogan that underscored the newspaper’s traditional role as a government watchdog: “Democracy Dies in Darkness.”
World’s-richest-man Elon Musk, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Amazon chief Jeff Bezos are slated to attend the forty-seventh president’s inauguration next week, according to NBC News. The tech trio will be seated alongside elected officials and Trump’s Cabinet selections.