Jesse Eisenberg, who played Mark Zuckerberg, rips Meta CEO
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed the company's rollback of DEI programs and its community-notes model in a leaked recording of an all-hands meeting.
"The founder of the next unicorn [a privately owned startup company valued over $1 billion] is going to be over 50," predicts Stroponiati. "The old investing frameworks are outdated: Founders over 50 are super experienced, and they have better skillsets.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg teased a "return to OG Facebook" as part of his key goals for 2025 in Wednesday's Q4 earnings call with investors. While the
Leslie Bibb, Carrie Coon, Walton Goggins and many more star in the eagerly anticipated new season of the HBO anthology drama.
This is going to be a big year,” said Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg on his newfound chumminess with the White House and host of technical AI advances.
The actor who played Mark Zuckerberg, in a movie about the social ... "The Social Network", suggested to HBO "Real Time" host Bill Maher that the prominent tech billionaires who have been ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg praised the Trump administration for backing Silicon Valley on a call with investors, adding that 2025 will be big for "redefining" the company's relationships with governments.
Actor Jesse Eisenberg ripped tech elites who have gotten friendly with President Trump in recent months, thinking they could be doing better things than supporting the new president.
But what stays with me isn’t the overwrought antipathy between Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, the tetchy tech titans who, in the summer of 2023, made noises — let’s call them grunts — about demonstrating their reciprocal disdain by squaring off and throwing down on the kind of stage used for Ultimate Fighting Championship events.
This is a McCarthy-era moment,” another Kennedy cousin tells VF, as unlikely allies dig in for a nasty fight over Kennedy Jr.’s nomination.
Tech superinvestor Marc Andreessen has been traveling the podcast circuit, sharing his insider take on why his industry has veered sharply to the right of late. Eventually, these interviews, like his one with the New York Times ’ Ross Douthat, wind around to Andreessen’s theory of “the Deal, with a capital D:”