WIth one foot out the White House door, the Biden administration issued 2 documents Musk is now using in his battle to break up OpenAI and Microsoft.
The CEO of OpenAI, Sam Altman took to his social media account on X (formerly Twitter) to share his thoughts about a letter of inquiry he received from Senators Elizabeth Warren and Michael Bennet. The letter raised questions about the motivations behind his donation to the incoming president’s inaugural fund.
Meta, Apple, Google and other tech companies have been named in a letter penned by Democratic lawmakers, accusing them of cozying up to President-elect Trump.
The announcement confirms one of two rumors that circled the internet this week. The other was about superintelligence.
In the age of AI, the ability to ask great questions is becoming more valuable than simply memorizing facts, says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Speaking on Adam Grant’s ReThinking podcast, Altman emphasized that understanding which questions to ask will outweigh the importance of… — Kuan Hoong (@kuanhoong) January 20, 2025
Elon Musk and Sam Altman traded barbs on social media Wednesday ... For now, TikTok is still unavailable in app stores run by Google, Apple, Amazon and Microsoft. Service providers face massive ...
Stargate isn’t just a massive AI investment—it’s a high-stakes bet on technology, power, and future global dominance.
OpenAI CEO and co-founder Sam Altman clapped back at two Democratic senators’ inquiry into his $1 million personal donation to President-elect Trump’s inaugural fund, quipping Friday
Welcome to The Hill’s Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Stargate criticism tests Musk loyalty under Trump 2.0 Elon Musk’s criticism of a
Stargate, the project to build AI-focused data centers in the US, will reportedly get $19 billion from OpenAI and SoftBank.
Musk slammed a Trump-backed $500 billion AI joint venture building out OpenAI’s artificial general intelligence.