Larry Ellison, the Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) co-founder and one of the richest people on the planet, watched $22.6 billion disappear in a single day on January 27—and he didn't even have to lift a finger. The selloff was brutal,
US tech titans Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos are taking a prominent place in the new Trump era, but another player from another era -- Oracle boss Larry Ellison -- is making a surprise return.
The world could soon see its first trillionaires, with five individuals projected to reach the milestone within the next decade if current trends persist, according to Oxfam's annual inequality report released Sunday reported CNN Business.
BILLIONAIRE Mark Zuckerberg has been caught out again after online sleuths discovered him liking a photo of Jeff Bezos’ partner on Instagram. The Meta CEO was first accused of
Several billionaires and media personalities such as MrBeast appear to be on the list of contenders to potentially acquire the popular social
Explore how education shaped the world's wealthiest individuals. From Jeff Bezos' engineering degree to Elon Musk's short-lived PhD pursuit, and Mark
In the early 2000s, two of the founders of Google, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, came across Schmidt's work in the software industry. By 2001, the founders had recruited Schmidt to run the company, later appointing him to become the company's CEO and join Google's Board of Directors.
As Elon Musk and his billionaire brethren take power in Trump’s second term, the lack of legal guardrails — and the fading power of Big Media — is becoming an existential crisis.
As the clock ticks down on TikTok's 75-day reprieve from divesting from its Chinese owners or being banned in the United States, several contenders are in the running.
The world's 500 wealthiest individuals lost a combined $108 billion thanks to a tech-sector sell-off triggered by Chinese AI developer DeepSeek.
Tech billionaires lost around $100 billion as Chinese AI disruptor DeepSeek challenges Silicon Valley with a low-cost chatbot.
DeepSeek AI, a cost-effective language model from China, outshines ChatGPT with fewer resources and lower costs. The tech-sector giants collectively experienced a loss of $94 billion in wealth, accounting for about 85% of the total drop in the Bloomberg index.