WASHINGTON - As tensions flared between Somalia and Ethiopia last year, social media became a breeding ground for misinformation. One video falsely clai
Trump bump meets reality: Concerns that Chinese startup DeepSeek has come up with a powerful new AI model that can do things better, faster and cheaper than the U.S. front-runners rattled stock markets, wiping a whopping $600 billion off chip-maker Nvidia and plunging the Nasdaq into disarray.
Facebook’s parent company, Meta Platforms, has reportedly agreed to pay $25 million to settle a lawsuit filed by former President Donald Trump, who accused the company of censorship after it suspended his Facebook and Instagram accounts in 2021.
The growth in the number of economic units in Bangladesh has slowed over the past decade, primarily due to capital shortages among rural entrepreneurs, according to the latest Economic Census of ...
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s first attempt to have asylum seekers held for assessment overseas was immediately blocked by judges. Now another is underway.
Meta Platforms, led by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is poised to make a major leap in artificial intelligence, with plans to invest as much as US$65 billion in 2025
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and CFO Susan Li spoke of the benefits of DeepSeek's flagship AI model to its company in a leaked all-hands.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg teased a "return to OG Facebook" as part of his key goals for 2025 in Wednesday's Q4 earnings call with investors. While the
On Friday, Mark Zuckerberg announced a $60-65 billion investment into Meta AI.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has outlined the social media giant's AI ambitions for 2025, stating that the company's upcoming large language model (LLM), Llama 4, will be "state of the art".
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.
Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel laureate who is leading Bangladesh’s government after protests forced out the previous prime minister, told Reuters Breakingviews that the upheaval in his country demonstrated the dangers of sycophantically praising politicians who pursue headline GDP growth without much thought about the consequences.