A US start-up whose backers include tech billionaires Sam Altman and Peter Thiel has raised $425mn to keep it on track to achieve its target of producing electricity from nuclear fusion in 2028.
Elon Musk, among other tech billionaires like David Sacks, Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, and Palmer Luckey, is vocal in supporting US President Donald Trump. These prominent 'Right Wing' tech figures are expected to influence the tech landscape during Trump's administration,
"You can imagine it being a useful tutor across a wide variety of subjects, including even spiritual or counseling or mental ones," the LinkedIn founder said.
Trump's pick for national science adviser Michael Kratsios signals the nation's prioritization of AI technology development.
Stuart Jay Olshansky, a professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Illinois at Chicago, spoke with Gizmodo back in October about the limitations of technology to radically increase human lifespans.
As far as key catalysts for growth investors are concerned, artificial intelligence remains the top factor on top of mind for most investors right now. In combination with a range of new AI offerings,
Trump named venture capitalist David Sacks as his AI and cryptocurrency czar in December.
The ramblings of the Palantir Technologies founder are worth taking seriously because of what they reveal about the future direction of the tech elite, and therefore global politics
One week into his second administration, Donald Trump has put technology at the forefront, featuring tech billionaires prominently at his inauguration and
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman has been immersed in Silicon Valley since his August 1967 birth in Palo Alto, California, in the shadow of Stanford University, where he and fellow technology
AI Mafia, an artificial intelligence (AI) activist platform, has announced the launch of a new AI activist agent on the 0G blockchain.
Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ:PLTR) emerged virtually unscathed from the artificial intelligence sector bloodbath on Monday following the DeepSeek release. Although it dropped 4% in sympathy with much of the rest of the AI industry,