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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is kicking off the "Woodstock of AI" in a keynote speech Monday. Analysts predict Nvidia will reveal new graphics processing chips that could transform the AI industry. AdvertisementNvidia is kicking of its massive AI event at a California sports arena on Monday. The event has been dubbed the "Woodstock of AI" and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is its rockstar headliner. The hype surrounding Huang's speech, and what he will reveal about the future of AI technology, is enormous.
Persons: Jensen Huang, , Jensen, hough, ike C, penAI's Organizations: Nvidia, Service, rockstar, GPU Technology Conference, Wall Locations: Woodstock, California, San
The Meta CEO on Monday posted a video review of Apple’s Vision Pro, the new rival mixed reality headset to Meta’s Quest 3. “Alright, guys, so, I finally tried Apple’s Vision Pro,” Zuckerberg begins in the video, which was posted to his Instagram. Zuckerberg also throws several other jabs at the Vision Pro in an effort to talk up his own product. Meta also has a more advanced, and more expensive, headset option called Meta Quest Pro. At least for now, most consumers probably aren’t going to buy either the Quest 3 or the Vision Pro.
Persons: New York CNN —, Mark Zuckerberg, ” Zuckerberg, it’s, Apple, Zuckerberg, Meta, metaverse, Meta's, Josh Edelson, it’s “ Organizations: New, New York CNN, Vision, Apple, Meta, Getty, Quest Locations: New York, AFP
Meta cofounder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who owns 350 million shares, stands to receive $700 million in yearly dividends. Zuckerberg is the world's fifth-richest person with a $142 billion fortune thanks to Meta's stock price gains. AdvertisementOn Thursday, Meta announced its first-ever dividend — and major shareholder Mark Zuckerberg is set to rake it in. Zuckerberg, who is Meta's cofounder and CEO, holds 350 million Meta shares — or a 13% stake — in Meta, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Since Meta announced a 50 cent-per-share dividend for Class A and B common stock, Zuckerberg stands to receive $175 million each quarter.
Persons: Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, , He's Organizations: Service, Meta, Bloomberg, Business Locations: Meta, Meta's
It’s hard to get into Harvard, even if you’ve done it before. Mark Zuckerberg, head of Meta, and Bill Ackman, head of the Pershing Square hedge fund, discovered as much, in their failed push to get dissident candidates onto the Harvard Board of Overseers, one of the university’s two governing bodies. The candidates — a slate of four backed by Mr. Ackman and one candidate backed by Mr. Zuckerberg — said on Friday that they had not collected enough petition signatures to get on the April ballot for election to the board. “We are disappointed but greatly appreciate all the support,” Zoe Bedell, an assistant U.S. attorney, who ran on the Ackman slate, said in a statement on Friday. “We look forward to trying again next year.”Their failure raised the question of how much support existed for Mr. Ackman’s persistent campaign against Harvard’s leadership over the past few months.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Ackman, Ackman, Zuckerberg —, ” Zoe Bedell, , Ackman’s Organizations: Harvard, Meta, Mr Locations: Pershing, U.S
Elon Musk took several jabs at Mark Zuckerberg and Meta while on Joe Rogan's podcast. I mean, Zuck himself doesn't post," Musk said of Twitter rival Threads. Zuckerberg usually posts on Threads every one to two weeks, a far cry from Musk's daily posts on X. Besides trashing Meta, Musk touched on a wide variety of topics, ranging from Tesla's Cybertruck to the courtroom sketches of disgraced FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried. "Yeah, it's eerily quiet," Musk said after host Joe Rogan called Threads a "ghost town" despite its record-breaking launch.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Joe Rogan's, Zuck, Musk, Zuckerberg, , X, Twitter —, Joe Rogan, Cybertruck, Sam Bankman, AIkGSaxVMA, DQh0GGNyaO — Joe Rogan, Zuckerberg —, Rogan, Meta's Organizations: Twitter, Service, Meta, trashing Meta
X CEO Linda Yaccarino slammed questions on whether she's running the company as "not nice." The X CEO took the stage shortly after an ex-Twitter staffer spoke on his negative experience at the company. AdvertisementAdvertisementX CEO Linda Yaccarino slammed claims she's watching Elon Musk run the social media company from the sidelines in an openly tense dialogue about working with the famously controlling billionaire. I don't care what the structure is at Meta, but who wouldn't want Elon Musk sitting by their side running product?" Before joining X, Yaccarino served as chairman of advertising sales and client partnerships at NBCUniversal.
Persons: Linda Yaccarino, Elon Musk, , she's, Yaccarino, CNBC's Julia Boorstin, Boorstin, Mark Zuckerberg, Walter Isaacson, Tesla, Martin Eberhard, Tim Higgins, he's, Elon, Kara Swisher's, Yoel Roth, Swisher . Roth, Musk, Insider's Kali Hays, Lara O'Reilly Organizations: Twitter, Service, Vox's, Meta Locations: Meta, NBCUniversal
Walter Isaacson still believes Elon Musk chose "the right person" in Linda Yaccarino to be X's CEO. The Musk biographer acknowledged the CEO's rocky interview at Code Conference was "not a pretty sight." AdvertisementAdvertisementElon Musk's biographer is still confident in the billionaire's choice to name Linda Yaccarino the CEO of X, formerly known as Twitter — despite a rocky interview at Vox Media's Code Conference. X CEO seemed unsure at times, played defense during interviewYaccarino's appearance at Vox's Code Conference on Wednesday quickly became the talk of X — with her performance drawing scrutiny and criticism. The X CEO decided to go on after his interview for the chance to get the last word in, according to Swisher.
Persons: Walter Isaacson, Elon Musk, Linda Yaccarino, Isaacson, Yaccarino, , Elon, I'm, Yoel Roth, Roth, Musk, Kara Swisher, Swisher, Julia Boorstin, Mark Zuckerberg, Boorstin, Insider's Bergman Organizations: Twitter, Service, Economic, of New, Code, Vox's, Wednesday, CNBC, Meta Locations: NBCUniversal, of New York, Miami, Swisher, Meta
I’ve read and watched many stories about the most heralded business leaders of the past few centuries. I’m not immune to the inherent drama of an arrogant rise, a spectacular fall or both. (For example, harassing job interviewees, firing people in front of crowds, attacking former employees of companies they purchased. Isaacson puts innovation first: This man might be a monster, but look at what he built! Whereas Mary Shelley, for instance, put innovation second: The man who built this is a monster!
Persons: I’ve, Walter Isaacson’s, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Aaron Sorkin’s, Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg, Jill Lepore, Isaacson’s, Isaacson, Franklin, Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Mary Shelley, Marisa Meltzer’s, Emily Weiss’s Glossier, , Meltzer, clichés, valorizes Weiss, Weiss, underling, Lauren Conrad, Whitney Port, Hunter Harris Organizations: The Times Locations:
Sen. Chuck Schumer is hosting sessions to help lawmakers understand and shape future rules on AI. AdvertisementAdvertisementMeredith Whittaker, president of messaging app Signal and former director of AI think tank the AI Now Institute, posted on X: "This is the room you pull together when your staffers want pictures with tech industry AI celebrities. It's not the room you'd assemble when you want to better understand what AI is, how (and for whom) it functions, and what to do about it." This is the room you pull together when your staffers want pictures with tech industry AI celebrities. It's not the room you'd assemble when you want to better understand what AI is, how (and for whom) it functions, and what to do about it.
Persons: Sen, Chuck Schumer, Axios, Mark Zuckerberg —, Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Per, Maria Curi, Rumman Chowdhury, Deborah Raji, Tristan Harris, b9mJhW39NW — Maria Cristina Curi, OpenAI, Alex Karp, Jack Clark, Clement Delangue, Meredith Whittaker, It's, UM1EhFNb1H — Meredith Whittaker, Face's Delangue Organizations: Morning, Google, Microsoft, Mozilla, Center of Humane, Meta, Nvidia Locations: Washington
Elon Musk now wants a "noble" debate with Zuckerberg. It looks like Elon Musk is trying really hard to get out of his cage fight with Mark Zuckerberg. And now Musk is floating the idea of having a "noble" debate with Zuckerberg instead of throwing hands. TED curator Chris Anderson proposed having a "cage match DEBATE" between the two billionaires, and Musk seemed game for it. Maye Musk tweeted in June that her son and Zuckerberg should "fight with words only" instead of beating each other up.
Persons: Elon Musk, Zuckerberg, Musk, Maye, Mark Zuckerberg, Chris Anderson, Anderson, Maye Musk Organizations: Zuck
Elon Musk said he can't confirm a date for his fight with Mark Zuckerberg just yet. Musk said he's getting an MRI of his neck and back, and may even require surgery before the fight. It looks like that cage match isn't going to happen anytime soon if Musk's got to go under the knife. Musk's neck and back issues could be linked to a sumo match he once participated in. Musk did not specify when this sumo match took place.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Musk, Musk's, Elon, Zuckerberg, Georges St, Pierre, Lex Fridman, John Danaher, he's, hasn't Organizations: Twitter, Canadian UFC
When Insider tried searching for Threads links on Twitter on Tuesday, there were no results. Whether it's a bug or intentional, Twitter is currently limiting searches for Threads links, despite the "URL:" search operator still working for other websites. For now, there is a workaround for those wanting to find Threads links on Twitter. This isn't the first time Twitter blocked search results for competing platforms — or blocked posting links to rival platforms altogether. In April, Twitter users were unable to interact with tweets that had links to Notes, a platform created by Substack to rival Twitter.
Persons: Musk, Elon Musk's, Andy Baio, Haley Tenore, Meta, it's, Substack, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg Organizations: Meta, Twitter, Facebook, Elon
Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg have tacitly challenged each other to a fight. Musk biographer Walter Isaacson doubts any fight will become a reality. The odds that Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg fight in a cage match are nil, according to Musk's biographer Walter Isaacson. The silly talk began when Musk a couple of weeks ago said he would fight Zuckerberg, who has recently gotten very into jiu-jitsu. Isaacson pointed to Threads, the Twitter-like app Zuckerberg is set to launch, as another element of the rivalry between the two.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Walter Isaacson, He's, Isaacson, Musk, Zuckerberg, he's, it's, I've, John Meecham, Elon, Lex Fridman, Fridman, Kali Hays Organizations: Meta, Creamery, Twitter, PBS Locations: khays
Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg have taken digs at each other before. Now the two tech CEOs have seemingly agreed to a cage fight. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told Bloomberg he "would go watch" if the two actually fight. "I would go watch if he and Zuck actually did that," OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told Bloomberg's Emily Chang on Thursday, though he said he doesn't think he would ever take Musk on in a physical fight. "He really cares about AI safety a lot," Altman told Bloomberg of Musk.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Musk, Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg —, , Zuck, Emily Chang, Altman, OpenAI, didn't Organizations: Bloomberg, Morning, Tech, Twitter, city's Apex, UFC, Musk
Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk say they are ready to face off in a "Vegas Octagon." Elon Musk is apparently ready to find out, with the world's richest man having challenged Mark Zuckerberg to a "cage match" — an offer that the martial arts-loving Facebook co-founder quickly agreed to. "I think we've entered the Twilight Zone," Ives added. I think we've entered the Twilight Zone. "I don't use FB and never have," Musk tweeted at the time, adding: "Just don't like Facebook.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Dan Ives, It's, we've, Ives, Zuckerberg, Musk, I'm Organizations: Facebook, Wedbush Securities, CNBC, Bloomberg, , SpaceX, Meta Locations: Cambridge, tweeting
Tim Sweeney on Tuesday mocked the notion that the metaverse is dead. But Sweeney is a long-term supporter of the Metaverse, putting in some serious money into the platform. Tim Sweeney, the billionaire CEO of Epic Games, doesn't think the metaverse is dead. After all, Epic Games — developer of Fortnite — is putting serious money into the metaverse. Moreover, Meta's still trying to convince users that the metaverse is alive and kicking and could potentially be lucrative.
The world's ultra-rich lost 13.6%, or $13.8 trillion, of their wealth in 2022, per a Knight Frank report. Just four in 10 ultra-wealthy people saw their wealth rise in 2022, the report says. Just four in 10 ultra-wealthy people saw a boost to their wealth in 2022, but the "overwhelming trend" was negative, Knight Frank said in the report. In 2022, the ultra-rich in Europe experienced the largest decline in wealth with a drop of 17%, followed by Australiasia with 11%, and the Americas by 10%, according to Knight Frank. According to Knight Frank, the ultra-rich parked 32% of their total wealth in their residential properties.
New York CNN —Nine minutes after Meta announced that it will allow Donald Trump back on its platforms, the disgraced ex-president was on his own Truth Social app posting about supposed election fraud in the 2020 election. And those content moderation calls are likely to be contentious. For instance, a Meta spokesperson said Trump will be permitted to attack the results of the 2020 election without facing consequences from the company. However, the spokesperson said, if Trump were to cast doubt on an upcoming election — like, the 2024 presidential race — the social giant will take action. But this is only one aspect of the murky content moderation waters that Meta will find itself in.
Instagram has launched more than 10 money-making tools for creators since 2020. From subscriptions to NFTs, the Meta-owned platform is testing many ways for creators to make money. Insider made a timeline to show all of Instagram's monetization features — and which ones are gone. "I'm always a little cautious because Instagram changes all the time," Yesenia Hudson, a content creator with 40,000 Instagram followers, told Insider. Meanwhile, this past year has been focused on ways creators can earn money from their followers with tools like Subscriptions or Digital Collectibles (Meta's NFT feature).
Creators said the many changes have left them exhausted, with some leaning away from the platform. Instagram creators are tired. "As we build a suite of creator monetization tools, we're constantly learning and testing remains crucial in understanding what offers the best experience. Whether or not ad-rev share will come to Instagram Reels (as is the case on Facebook), however, has not been announced. Instagram isn't the only social platform making sweeping changes to creator monetization tools, either.
Randi Zuckerberg's company Assemble is buying the NFT community Meta Angels for an undisclosed sum. Meta Angels will run alongside Hug, Zuckerberg's Web3 community to welcome newcomers to NFTs. Zuckerberg, Cavoulacos, and Downey all sought to help change that. Zuckerberg — the sister of Mark Zuckerberg, Meta's CEO, and the former director of market development at Facebook — cofounded the Web3 community Hug. Assemble — the parent company of Hug and other technology projects still in stealth — is acquiring Meta Angels, Zuckerberg and Cavoulacos told Insider.
Meta's not giving up on its fight to woo creators with more ways to earn money. Instagram's NFT feature, digital collectibles , will add several new tools including ways to mint, buy, and sell NFTs on Instagram. The features announced today are part of Meta's constantly changing suite of monetization tools for creators. From "Creator Incentive Programs" that reward creators for posting to Instagram, to NFT tools, to a growing creator-brand marketplace now equipped with media kits. Here's a breakdown of the various money-making tools Instagram is testing or has rolled out for creators:
Peter Thiel and Mark Zuckerberg have known each other since 2004, when Thiel became Facebook's first major investor. Some believe Thiel acted as Zuckerberg's "puppet master," and Facebook employees noticed that Zuckerberg seemed to rely on Thiel in an unusual and sometimes concerning way. Zuckerberg told Thiel he should resign from Facebook's board of directors in August 2017. Thiel underestimated Facebook's potential and told Zuckerberg to sell the company in its second year. When Yahoo offered to buy Facebook for $1 billion, Thiel told Zuckerberg to take the deal — but then-22-year-old CEO said no.
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