Quarterly earnings at tech giants Meta and Microsoft surged, indicating that multi-billion dollar AI investments are starting to pay off.
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By expanding its partnership with Ray-Ban, Meta is turning its attention back to building futuristic hardware.
The adage “go big or go home” may not always apply to AI.
The transaction would create the world’s largest advertising agency — that is, if you don’t count Big Tech players like Google and Amazon.
After serving as the driving force for a blistering market rise, the so-called Magnificent Seven have taken an epic stumble in 2025.
European authorities fined Meta for allegedly engaging in antitrust behavior by favoring its classified service Facebook Marketplace.
Amazon wants to reduce its reliance on Nvidia and offer an alternative to Nvidia for Amazon Web Services clients in the process.
Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the government plans to introduce a law banning children from social media.
The warnings come as the industry adapts to seismic shifts in technology — which means it may just have some new tricks up its sleeve.
Meta is developing an artificial intelligence-based search engine to stake its claim in a rapidly growing market.
But Meta’s AI may have Snap’s beat “just in sheer volume” of data, one expert said.
Tech like this could keep Meta’s models from prompt attack data slips — or at least give it some “thought leadership brownie points.”
Central to the trial is one question: Just who, exactly, are Meta’s competitors? The FTC’s answer may be narrower than you’d expect.
It’s the latest in several moves — announced in swift succession — that suggest a radical overhaul in Zuckerberg’s thinking about Meta.
In a concentrated market, who’s responsible for responsible AI?
Advertising big wigs say they may flee Meta platforms if their brands appear next to toxic content. But where else would they go?