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But the Tesla and SpaceX CEO said he's had little input on Trump's Cabinet picks. Elon Musk says he's had little input on President-elect Donald Trump's cabinet picks. He was a major contributor to Trump's campaign, spending just under $119 million on his pro-Trump political action committee, America PAC. Musk, according to multiple media reports, has joined Trump's calls with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Google CEO Sundar Pichai. Lutnick, Musk wrote in an X post on November 16, "will actually enact change," compared to another candidate, hedge fund CEO Scott Bessent.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump, he's, Musk, Donald Trump's, Haven't, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, cott, ott Organizations: SpaceX, Cabinet, New York Post, Trump's, UFC, Trump, Madison Locations: Lago, Palm Beach , Florida, usk
Several companies, from Airbnb to Snap, are now reconsidering the utility of product managers entirely, while others claim that the product manager's reign will only expand in the age of AI. Advertisement"The shift in power moved from engineering to product managers," says Hubert Palan, the CEO of Productboard, a company that provides software for product managers. "The product manager is at the center of everything," says Avi Siegel, a former product manager who's working on his own startup, Momentum. Whether their coworkers are happy about it or not, product managers are gaining recognition. "The future really does belong to product managers," says Frank Fusco, a product manager turned CEO of a software company called Silicon Society.
Persons: Elle, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, YouTube's Neal Mohan, Gamble, Hubert Palan, doesn't, Avi Siegel, who's, Aaron, he's, ZipRecruiter, Zippia, I've, they're, Palan, Meg Watson, Watson, Brian Chesky, Paul Graham —, Frank Fusco, Fusco Organizations: LinkedIn, Procter, Hewlett, Packard, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Companies, Big Tech, Carnegie Mellon University, . News, McKinsey, Software, Spotify, Chesky, Silicon Society
AdvertisementSpaceX is planning to launch Starship for the sixth time on Tuesday. Reports suggest that President-elect Trump may join Elon Musk for the launch. Elon Musk and Donald Trump have been inseparable since the election — and now Trump will reportedly attend the latest launch of Musk's giant Starship rocket. SpaceX is set to conduct the sixth test flight of Starship, the 165-foot spacecraft that Musk wants to use to take humanity to Mars, on Tuesday. Multiple reports on Monday suggested that Donald Trump is planning to attend the Starship launch — another indication of just how important a role Musk will likely play in the next administration.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Google's Sundar Pichai, Joe Rogan, Kid Rock, Chris Unger, Brendan Carr, Carr, Mars, CHANDAN KHANNA, Musk, Starship's Organizations: SpaceX, Trump, Elon, UFC, PAC, Department of Government, Federal Communications Commission, Getty, Federal Aviation Authority, Business Locations: SpaceX's Starbase, Texas, New York City
His latest fascination is Google's Gemini Live, an AI voice assistant. Marc Benioff gave Google's AI voice assistant, Gemini Live, his stamp of approval. "Just downloaded Gemini Live, and I'm absolutely blown away," he wrote in an X post on Sunday. Google released a smartphone app for Gemini Live on Apple's App Store on Thursday, just a few months after the virtual assistant was made free for users. We already have that live," Benioff said.
Persons: Marc Benioff, Benioff, Sundar Pichai, Copilot, Insider's Ashley Stewart, OpenAI's ChatGPT, ChatGPT's, Axios, Jensen Huang, David Sacks Organizations: Gemini, Microsoft, Google, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Business, BI, Pacific, Nvidia Locations: Francisco
While keeping buy ratings on both stocks, Nathanson raised his firm's price targets on Alphabet and Meta. In support of giving Alphabet the edge, he sees faster revenue growth from Meta but at a higher cost. For one, Meta has consistently delivered revenue and earnings ahead of consensus, rooted in stron advertising revenue from AI advancements. Bottom line Jim Cramer sees merit in MoffettNathanson's buy calls on Alphabet and Meta and believes it is just about "time to buy both" of these AI and advertising leaders. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
Persons: It's, Michael Nathanson —, Craig Moffett, , underperformance, Nathanson, Jim Cramer, Trump Donald Trump's, Jim Cramer's, Jim, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai Organizations: MoffettNathanson Research, Facebook, Meta, Reality Labs, Labs, Google, Tech, Trump, CNBC, REUTERS Locations: Meta
Google's head of research told BI that learning to code continues to be a valuable skill. A decade later, Google's head of research says the advice still rings true — even in the age of AI. Related stories"I think that basic coding is like basic math," Matias said. Google Research has already integrated AI into tools like flood forecasting models, which Matias said can save lives. With AI impacting so many fields, Matias said "it's important to master the basic things," like the fundamentals of coding.
Persons: Yossi Matias, , Google's, IBM's Jonathan Adashek Matias, Matias, Sundar Pichai, it's Organizations: Service, Chelsea, Google, Google Research Locations: New York
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang doubled down on his vision for "AI employees" in a recent interview. The CEO said he believes AI agents will be specialized and rented out by other companies. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently talked about why he thinks we'll all be working alongside "AI employees" eventually. "There's no question we're gonna have AI employees of all kinds," Huang told the podcast "No Priors" in an episode published Thursday. The Nvidia CEO said that while this will change some jobs, it will also help secure employment.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Huang, , we'll, they're, Eric Yuan, Yuan, Sundar Pichai Organizations: Nvidia, Service, Wired, AIs, Slack, Cadence
Generative AI wasn't part of the lexicon for most of us during President-elect Donald Trump 's first four years in the White House. At a high level, generative AI is a cutting-edge form of technology that will shape the next decade and beyond. While the AI field has been around for decades, generative AI applications can create new content, including computer code, human-like text and images, in response to user prompts. Those that lead in generative AI will very likely shape the world as we know it. With 5G, Trump didn't just hope the U.S. could just fun faster than everyone else.
Persons: Donald Trump, ChatGPT, Kamala Harris, Trump, Elon Musk, OpenAI, JD Vance, Vance, Joe Biden's, Trump's, OpenAI's Sam Altman, Alphabet's Sundar Pichai, Jim Cramer, it's, Jim, they're, Jim Cramer's, Callaghan Organizations: Trump, Billionaire, Republican, Big Tech, Republican Party's, GOP, 5G, Mobile, Sprint, Verizon, Nvidia, Microsoft, Huawei, Biden, Deutsche Bank, South China, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Apple, Washington, Intel, Eaton, Trust, CNBC, Convention Center, Callaghan O'hare Locations: Ohio, U.S, United States, America, We've, China, Taiwan, South, Beijing, Palm Beach, West Palm Beach , Florida
Trump’s win came about with the help of Musk and his wealthy tech friends including investors Peter Thiel and David Sacks. They boosted Trump with financial contributions, fundraising help and public endorsements on subjects such as the economy and deregulation. Few other major tech executives publicly endorsed in the presidential race, though some of them made vague comments praising one or the other candidate. Trump has a complicated history with many tech CEOs. In their social media posts, several tech CEOs used the word “decisive” to describe Trump’s victory and they employed popular buzzwords like “innovation” in an apparent attempt to identify common ground.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy, Trump, ” Zuckerberg, ” Trump, Zuckerberg, , Musk, Trump’s, Peter Thiel, David Sacks, Bezos, Reid Hoffman, — wouldn’t, , bitcoin, Musk’s, Parler, Jeff, Mike Davis, Ivan Raiklin, Cook Organizations: Tech, Trump, titans, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, The Washington, Democratic, Trump’s, Pentagon, The Washington Post, III, Trump Tower, Google Locations: Silicon Valley, Butler , Pennsylvania, Tesla, Coinbase, County, State
Amazon founder and Executive Chairman Jeff Bezos celebrated Trump's win in a post on X, calling it an "extraordinary political comeback and decisive victory." Trump repeatedly took aim at Bezos' ownership of the Post, Amazon's tax record and its relationship with the Postal Service. Apple CEO Tim Cook congratulated Trump on his victory in a post on X. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in a post on X that he hopes Trump will see "huge success in the job." Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg called Trump's election win a "decisive victory" and said he looks forward to working with the Trump administration.
Persons: Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Donald Trump, JD Vance, Trump, Bezos, Kamala Harris, Andy Jassy, Jassy, Tim Cook, Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Elon, Musk, Trump's, Tesla, Sundar Pichai, he's, Satya Nadella, Reid Hoffman, Hoffman, Harris, Gelsinger, Arvind Krishna, Chuck Robbins, Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi, Aaron Levie, Michael Dell Organizations: Economic, Amazon, U.S, Washington Post, Postal Service, Trump, Post, Democratic, Apple, Facebook, SpaceX, White, America PAC, Google, Microsoft, Venture, LinkedIn, Intel, Biden, IBM, Cisco, Dell Technologies Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Glasgow, Scotland, Pennsylvania, Bezos, United States, U.S
There's just one problem: they aren't allowed to make political posts, so they're being creative. As the 2024 US election unfolded, Googlers have taken to the company's internal message board — a meme generator named Memegen — to express their feelings. One of the top Memegen posts on Wednesday was a picture of a fake newspaper named "The Memegen," with the headline, "Nothing Happened. Related storiesTwo former Googlers built Memegen in 2010 as a way for employees to vent about work, life, and even their C-suite. Earlier this year, after employees used Memegen to share their thoughts on the war in Gaza, Google barred staff from making political posts, several employees told BI.
Persons: There's, Sundar Pichai, , Raya, Sisu, Googlers, Breitbart, Donald Trump's, Sergey Brin Organizations: Google, Service, Business, BI Locations: Disney's, Gaza
More executives are seeking protection, a private security firm chief told The Financial Times. Steve Jones, the chief executive of security company Allied Universal, told The Financial Times that global political instability had created increased demand for security services. AdvertisementLast year, Alex Bomberg, chief executive of Intelligent Protection International, told Financial News that demand for executive security had doubled in 12 months. According to Allied's World Security Report, in 2022, companies lost more than $1 trillion in revenue due to physical security incidents. AdvertisementOne in four publicly listed companies reported a drop in their value after a physical security incident over the last year, the report said.
Persons: Steve Jones, Jones, We've, Allianz's, Mark, Sundar, Alex Bomberg, It's, that's Organizations: Financial Times, Service, Allied Universal, Fortune Business, Trump, Allianz Insurance, Palestine, Group, Web Services, Google, Business, Companies, Meta, Intelligent Protection, Financial News Locations: Israel, Washington ,, Germany
Google has been moderating and removing employees' internal election-related conversations, CNBC has learned. Despite the warnings, employees continued posting memes related to the election and criticizing the company's policies on Tuesday. The most recent leadership guidance shows the company is taking expanded action to temper internal political discussions. That includes through the company's Google Search, Google News and YouTube services. Google briefly shut down an internal message board this March after employees posted comments about the company's Nimbus contract.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, Pichai, Donald Trump Organizations: Google, CNBC, Tuesday's, Monday, YouTube, Republican, Amazon, U.S . National Labor Board Locations: Tuesday's U.S, U.S
Insider Today: Big Tech battle royale
  + stars: | 2024-11-03 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . On the agenda today:Related Video How Twitter panic took down Silicon Valley BankBut first: Takeaways from a big week in Big Tech. All about AI, all the timeGetty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIThe trillion-dollar giants of Big Tech reported earnings this week, beating estimates and committing billions to AI. The disappearing tech freebiesMint Images - David Arky/Getty, masterzphotois/Getty, Tyler Le/BIAfter years of upping the ante with everything from exercise classes to laundry services, tech companies are clamping down on freebies.
Persons: , we'll, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Sundar Pichai, execs, Mark Zuckerberg, Natalie Ammari, Tesla, James Yates, David Arky, Tyler Le, BI's Graham Flanagan, Matt Garman Organizations: Business, Service, Big, Big Tech, Apple Apple, underwhelmed, Apple Intelligence, Meta Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft Microsoft, United States Army, Amazon Locations: Big Tech, China, Italy, Spain, New Zealand, Hawaii
Among the megacap stocks, Alphabet , Amazon and Microsoft grew year-over-year, cloud-based revenue by 35%, 19% and 20%, respectively. But of the five largest companies that have so far reported results — Meta Platforms , Alphabet, Amazon, Apple and Microsoft — only two finished the week higher. META 5D mountain Meta, 5 days Commentary from some of the tech companies signaled that AI demand remains robust. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy justified stepped up AI spending, saying that investors will be rewarded over the long haul. AMZN 5D mountain Amazon, 5 days Meanwhile, the still enormous spending patterns among megacap technology companies signals no downturn for de facto AI leader Nvidia.
Persons: Gene Munster, Sundar Pichai, Andy Jassy, Ray Wang, Wang, Mark Malek, Constellation's Wang, Satya Nadella's, Eric Clark, Clark Organizations: Microsoft, Apple, Constellation Research, Brands, Nvidia
With Wall Street laser focused on cloud computing this week, Google outpaced its rivals in growth, a key sign for investors that the internet company is gaining traction in artificial intelligence. Amazon Web Services, which remains the market leader, grew 19% to $27.45 billion, meaning it's more than twice the size of Google Cloud but expanding about half as quickly. Second-place Microsoft said revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 33% from a year earlier. Five of the six trillion-dollar tech companies reported results this week, with AI chipmaker Nvidia as the outlier. Google reported a 17% cloud operating margin in the third quarter, after first turning a profit last year.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, Melissa Otto Organizations: Munich, Google, Web Services, Microsoft, Nvidia, Argus Research, CNBC Locations: Hof, Munich, Germany
Alphabet executives, donning Halloween costumes, faced questions from concerned employees at an all-hands meeting on Wednesday, following comments on the company's earnings call suggesting that more cost cuts are coming. "There is a reality to it," said Brian Ong, vice president of Google recruiting, according to a recording of the meeting reviewed by CNBC. Ashkenazi said one of her key priorities in the new role would be to make more cuts as Google expands its spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure in 2025. Google has been restructuring its workforce to move more quickly in the AI arms race, where it faces increased competition. Within Google, employees have expressed concern that the company is preparing for more layoffs, possibly after the end of the year, according to internal correspondence viewed by CNBC.
Persons: Brian Ong, Ong, Anat Ashkenazi, Ruth Porat, Jeff Dean, Ashkenazi, Reggie Miller, Sundar Pichai, That's Organizations: Google, CNBC, Indiana Pacers, Amazon Locations: Silicon Valley
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said AWS gives the company a leg up in the AI race. Jassy said AWS has shown that Amazon can handle the logistics for scaling AI. AdvertisementAmazon CEO Andy Jassy on Thursday explained why he thinks the company is well-positioned to excel in AI: Amazon Web Services. Jassy talked up the cloud-computing unit on Amazon's third-quarter earnings call, defending the company's aggressive investments in AI. Amazon beat Wall Street's third-quarter expectations on revenue and earnings per share, with the stock rising 6% in after-hours trading.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Jassy, , Sundar Pichai Organizations: Service, Web Services, Amazon, Companies, AWS, Big Tech
Companies beat expectations, with some boosted by large cloud growth. AdvertisementThe tech giants Meta, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft reported earnings this week, and investors were laser-focused on the results of AI investments. Cloud is kingMicrosoft, Alphabet, and Amazon saw significant growth in their cloud businesses, fueled by increased demand. Jeremy Goldman, EMARKETER's senior director of briefings, told BI that Microsoft's cloud business had decelerated from the "breakneck pace" of previous quarters. Related storiesWhile Google reported stronger cloud growth, Microsoft still leads it in cloud market share, and both are behind Amazon Web Services.
Persons: , Kate Leaman, Jeremy Goldman, EMARKETER's, Amy Hood, Dan Romanoff, Andy Jassy, Tracy Woo, Forrester, AWS's, Jassy, Rufus, Sundar Pichai, Pichai, Mark Zuckerberg, Hood, Michael Field, Jaejune Kim, Lisa Su, we've Organizations: Apple, Companies, Service, Microsoft, Amazon, Morningstar, Google, Amazon Web, Amazon Web Services, Investment, Big Tech, Bank of America Securities, Meta, Nvidia, SK Hynix, Samsung, AMD, Services
The big storyPresidential betsChris duMond; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIWe're less than a week from election day, but one group can already claim victory: betting markets. Kalshi's legal victory in October over the CFTC to offer election betting paved the way for the trend. iStock; Rebecca Zisser/BIThe betting market's biggest tests might come after the election. Betting markets have Trump as a heavy favorite, whereas traditional polls indicate a tight race. AdvertisementShould Trump win in a landslide, it could strengthen the case for using betting markets as a key tool for election analysis.
Persons: , Chris duMond, Chip Somodevilla, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Matthew Fox, Donald Trump, Polymarket, iStock, Rebecca Zisser, Nate Silver, Tesla, Zuckerberg, Citadel's, Justin Lubell, Lubell, Steve Schwarzman, Ken Griffin, Trump, Tyler Le, Harris, Sundar Pichai, Elon Musk, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Apple, CFTC, Trump, TikTok, Meta Connect, Meta, Bank of America, Blackstone, Republican, Amazon, AWS, Five Apple Intelligence, Google, The Washington Post, Street, Microsoft, Starbucks Locations: French, New York, London
More than a quarter of new code at Google is made by AI and then checked by employees. Google is doubling down on AI internally to make its business more efficient. Business Insider previously reported that Google launched an internal AI model named "Goose." More than a quarter of new code created at Google is generated by AI, said CEO Sundar Pichai on Tuesday during the company's Q3 earnings call. AdvertisementBusiness Insider reported in February that the company had launched a new internal AI model named "Goose" to help employees code and build products.
Persons: , Sundar Pichai, Pichai, Goose Organizations: Google, Business, Service, BI, Company
For nine years, the CFO role at Google and parent company Alphabet was held by Ruth Porat, who took a giant pay package in 2015 to leave Wall Street for Silicon Valley. "But I think any organization can always push a little further and I'll be looking at additional opportunities." During the Q&A portion of the call, Evercore ISI's Mark Mahaney asked, "As you're coming in looking at this fresh, is it clear to you there are a lot of newfound cost efficiencies or ongoing cost efficiencies?" The new CFO said one way Google can find additional efficiencies is by using AI "within our own processes and how we get work done." WATCH: Google search benefiting from generative AI
Persons: Ruth Porat, Porat's, Anat Ashkenazi, Sundar Pichai, Ruth, Sundar, Ashkenazi, Eli Lilly, Porat, There's, Pichai, Askenazi, Evercore, Mark Mahaney Organizations: Google, Tuesday Locations: Silicon Valley
However, on "Mad Money" following the release, Jim said Alphabet delivered an "unambiguously great quarter." Alphabet Why we own it : Alphabet's Google Search is an invaluable tool for advertisers. Revenue for the Google Search, YouTube ads, and Google Network line items totaled $65.85 billion. That was up more than 10% from the year-ago quarter, though it was a slower growth rate than in the second quarter. The company exited the quarter with $93.23 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities on its balance sheet.
Persons: It's, Jim Cramer, Jim, it's, Sundar Pichai, We're, Waymo, Anat Ashkenazi, Pichai, Jim Cramer's, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Google, U.S, European, Justice Department, Big Tech, Nvidia, YouTube, Microsoft, Revenue, Google Services, Walmart, Dallas Fort, CNBC Locations: U.S, Dallas, Dallas Fort Worth, Mountain View , California
Google's new CFO, Anat Ashkenazi, signaled the company can do more to save money and move faster. She said leaders had done good work cutting costs, and they could "push a little further." Google is ramping up its spending on AI, and Wall Street analysts want more details. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Ashkenazi name-checked Google CEO Sundar Pichai and former CFO Ruth Porat for doing "really good work" in starting to rework Google's cost base.
Persons: Anat Ashkenazi, , Sundar Pichai, Ruth Porat, Ashkenazi, Mark Mahaney, Pichai, Sundar Organizations: Google, Wall Street, Service, BNP
While dozens of American business leaders — your Reeds Hoffman, your Marks Cuban, etc. “I was very grateful … for his willingness to stand up to the pressure from Donald Trump in 2015 … until now. That’s why 88 business leaders last month endorsed Harris. On the other hand, a little back-channeling and olive-branch-extending could give business leaders and their companies some goodwill in an administration helmed by a notoriously impulsive, vengeful leader. In a business world that craves certainty and economic stability, executives may be telling themselves that their silence is purely a business decision.
Persons: CNN Business ’, New York CNN —, Donald Trump, didn’t, Hoffman, Marks, Kamala Harris, Jeff Bezos, Trump, Marty Baron, Patrick Soon, Harris, Baron, CNN’s Michael Smerconish, Bezos “, Bezos, , Elon Musk, “ Trump, ” Baron, NPR’s David Folkenflik, Steve Contorno, Alayna Treene, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, Andy Jassy, Mark Zuckerberg, it’s Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Democratic, The Washington Post, Republican, Los Angeles Times, Saturday, SpaceX, Washington, LA Times, Apple, Trump, European Union, Las, Google, Amazon, CNN, Meta, White Locations: New York, Amazon, Las Vegas, Pennsylvania
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