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.
Some of President Donald Trump's working-class and middle-class supporters see a lack of emphasis on lowering consumer costs and making daily American life more affordable.
President Donald Trump may have placed billionaires on the stage behind him at his swearing-in, but his administration could care less what they want.
In a fiercely competitive bidding process, RIL outbid a consortium of top Silicon Valley CEOs, including Google’s Sundar Pichai, Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, Adobe’s Shantanu Narayen, and Palo Alto Networks’ Nikesh Arora.
As Mark Zuckerberg and other tech titans have embraced President Trump and muffled internal dissent at their companies, their mostly left-leaning employees have objected with subtle acts of defiance.
In the said petition, the employees have argued that Google is financially stable, so the layoffs don't make sense.
“There are rumors that Elon Musk has again challenged Mark Zuckerberg for a fight,” joked an X user and shared the photo. “For Elon Musk and Sundar Pichai, phone is way more important than President Trump,” commented another. A third joked, “These kids and their damn phones.”
AM IST Prabhakar Raghavan is the Chief Technologist of Google and works closely with CEO Sundar Pichai, to further the company's long-standing culture of technical excellence. He is an IIT Madras graduate who completed his BTech in electrical engineering in 1981.
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.
Some of the most exclusive seats at President Donald Trump’s inauguration were reserved for powerful tech CEOs who also are among the world’s richest men.
The billionaire Ambani family won the bidding battle for a stake in the Oval Invincibles cricket team in London, after interest from private equity firms and Silicon Valley executives.
To protest their boss Mark Zuckerberg and his recent company-wide changes, Meta employees are reportedly sneaking tampons back in men’s bathrooms in its offices. But it isn’t the only tech company seeing some resistance amid Trump 2.