Meta Platforms Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said his company will invest between $60 billion and $65 billion in capital expenditures related to artificial intelligence in 2025, well above the figure analysts had been projecting.
Mark Zuckerberg lamented the rise of “culturally neutered” companies that have sought to distance themselves from “masculine energy,” adding that it’s good if a culture “celebrates the ...
Mark Zuckerberg is ready to put tens of billions of dollars toward making Meta (META) an artificial intelligence leader this year.
Stephen Miller told Zuckerberg that the billionaire mogul had “an opportunity to help reform America, but it would be on Trump’s terms.”
Zuckerberg warns he will cut ‘low performers’ as he looks to fire up to 5 percent of Meta staff: Report - Meta boss reportedly told staff that the company was looking to ‘move out low-performers faster’.
A well-placed venture capitalist helping craft Trump’s tech policy told NYNext that for the first time in years, “I don’t know anyone going to Davos.”
Meta is planning to slash roughly 5% of its staff this year in a move aimed at weeding out under-performers, CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed on Tuesday. In a memo to employees on Meta’s internal message board, Zuckerberg indicated that the company would hire new workers this year to replace the ousted employees.
Mark Zuckerberg is making a statement – on his wrist. The Meta CEO recently appeared in a Facebook video wearing the ultraexclusive Greubel Forsey Hand Made 1, a luxury timepiece that costs over $900,
Bloomberg reviewed the internal memo explaining the cuts, which was posted to Meta's internal Workplace forum Tuesday. In it, Zuckerberg confirmed that Meta was shifting its strategy to "move out low performers faster" so that Meta can hire new talent to fill those vacancies this year.
Meta will continue to use its fact checkers outside of the U.S. “for now,” and plans to see how its Community Notes system works in the U.S.
TikTok Chief Executive Officer Shou Chew attended President Donald Trump’s inaugural events in Washington, appearing at a church service before the swearing-in ceremony as his popular video-sharing app faces the threat of a nationwide ban.
How podcasters like Joe Rogan and Logan Paul turned young men, a once apolitical demographic, into a massively powerful voting bloc