Since then, Musk hasn’t hidden his anger with Altman and OpenAI. He’s currently suing the company over its decision to become a for-profit corporation, and he regularly trolls the company on X—the platform he bought for $44 billion back in 2022. All of which is why the past week has been hilarious.
Trump's inauguration drew several business and tech CEOs, including Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Tim Cook, and TikTok's Shou Zi Chew.
"Trump represents an unprecedented threat to America," Altman wrote in 2016. The day after President Donald Trump returned to office, Sam Altman, the CEO of tech giant OpenAI, stood behind the ...
OpenAI CEO and co-founder Sam Altman called Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek “impressive,” while shrugging off concerns the startup could threaten OpenAI’s
Apple CEO Tim Cook and many other big tech CEOs have been spotted at one of Monday's inauguration events that heralds Donald Trump becoming President of the United States for the second time.
When the leaders of Meta, Google, Amazon and Apple were spotted together at church on the morning of Donald Trump’s inauguration, it was no accident.
Liang Wenfeng, the mastermind behind DeepSeek, has quickly risen to global prominence, shaking the foundations of the artificial intelligence industry. His journey from a hedge fund manager to a leading figure in AI innovation has been nothing short of extraordinary.
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.
On The Intercept Briefing podcast with Tech Policy Press’s Justin Hendrix: how a new inaugural era of class unity in tech and politics is taking shape.
On the political landscape, tech has made the biggest pivot. Amid threats of heavy regulation and even being broken up under Biden, Silicon Valley has embraced Donald Trump’s administration. The likes of Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook, Open AI’s Sam Altman and of course Elon Musk, all at the centre of power at last week’s inauguration.
On the political landscape, tech has made the biggest pivot. Amid threats of heavy regulation and even being broken up under Biden, Silicon Valley has embraced Donald Trump’s administration. The likes of Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook, Open AI’s Sam Altman and of course Elon Musk, were all at the centre of power at last week’s inauguration.
The Microsoft CEO will have to perform a delicate balancing act over the next four years to keep his company from becoming a target.