The world’s 500 richest people got vastly richer in 2024, with Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jensen Huang leading the group of billionaires to a new milestone: A combined $10 trillion net worth.
Companies and wealthy individuals who had previously opposed President-elect Donald J. Trump have had a change of heart and are now donating millions of dollars to his […]
Mark Zuckerberg has plenty to celebrate as he heads into the new year, with Meta's stock up 66% and some newfound swagger in his step.
The U.S. President-elect’s recent social-media post saying the estate is the ‘Center of the Universe’ reflects the way his resort has become a salon and celebration for his movement
WASHINGTON – Meta, the social media giant that owns Facebook and Instagram, donated $1 million to President-elect Donald Trump’s inaugural fund, as the company tries to mend fences ahead of a second administration that could oversee major social media regulations.
The billionaire and his company needed Speaker Mike Johnson's help to stop legislation that would have regulated social media for the first time.
That’s more than Bernard Arnault (who is worth $233 billion), Jeff Bezos ($194 billion), Mark Zuckerberg ($177 billion), and Larry Ellison ($141 billion). I don’t know anything about this Arnault guy or Ellison, but Bezos is a very familiar name, as is Mark Zuckerberg.
Hefty donations from tech companies and leaders to President-elect Trump’s inaugural fund are a sign of Silicon Valley’s shifting relationship with the incoming leader after past tensions.
US President-elect Donald Trump filed a brief Friday urging the Supreme Court to pause a law that would ban TikTok the day before his January 20 inaugurati
Mark Zuckerberg has plenty to celebrate as he heads into the new year, with Meta's stock up 66% and some newfound swagger in his step.
O’Leary pointed out that federal deregulation under Trump's administration is particularly attractive to companies involved in mergers and acquisitions. He noted that Trump will "cool off all these pursuits and change many of the administrative rules that make it harder to get things done."