Meta execs meet advertisers to discuss changes in content policies, including removal of third-party fact-checkers.
Lizza Dwoskin here filling in on the newsletter from Davos with an assist from Cristiano. Send news tips to:
[email protected]. Today: In Davos and Washington, tech execs gather under divergent goals As business titans and world leaders gathered Monday in Davos,
A well-placed venture capitalist helping craft Trump’s tech policy told NYNext that for the first time in years, “I don’t know anyone going to Davos.”
DAVOS: Surrounded by snowy mountain peaks in the Swiss Alps, the world’s rich and powerful rub shoulders at Davos, with only one man dominating their chats: US President Donald Trump. “This year, the elephant is in the room,” quipped Graham Allison, professor of government at the Harvard Kennedy School.
Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince says the Trump administration should make cybersecurity defenses mission critical.
A leading NGO warned Monday of an emerging "aristocratic oligarchy" with massive political clout and primed to profit from Donald Trump's presidency, as global elites descend on Davos for their annual confab.
Dario Amodei, CEO and co-founder of AI company Anthropic, joined TIME editor-in-chief Sam Jacobs on stage to talk about the future of AI.
Trump's inauguration coincides with day one of Davos, a yearly meeting of the world's business and politics elite. Which will the powerful opt to skip?
In a notable divergence from tradition, several billionaire business leaders, including Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAI's Sam Altman, and Uber's Dara Khosrowshahi, have opted to attend Donald Trump's inauguration in Washington, D.C., on January 20 instead of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
That is why the most consequential announcement involves Joel Kaplan, Zuckerberg's tight-lipped political consigliere. For the coming years, Kaplan will be the face in your living room, justifying Meta's handling of whatever crisis,
His second term heralds the demise of the pro-trade internationalist ethos that the WEF has long revered. Read more at straitstimes.com.
The World Economic Forum is under way and it seems business leaders in western Europe are more fearful of the impact of a cyber attack on their operations than the damage from conflicts or inflation. Eoin Burke-Kennedy reports from the Swiss resort.