Sam Altman is rejoining the board of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI along with three new directors, as the startup tries to move past his sudden ouster in November that had shocked the tech industry.
Private equity firm Astorg is considering a sale of its U.S.-based intellectual property software firm Anaqua, four people familiar with the matter told Reuters, with two of them saying the company could be worth as much as $3 billion.
Swedish payments group Klarna must pay a fine of 7.5 million crowns ($733,324) for violating the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) by not providing sufficient information to its users, a Swedish court of appeal ruled on Monday.
Spain’s High Court on Monday upheld a temporary ban on Worldcoin’s iris-scanning venture, the latest blow to a project that has sparked privacy concerns in several countries.
Reddit is aiming for a valuation of up to $6.4 billion in its U.S. initial public offering (IPO), the social media platform said on Monday, as it nears one of the most-anticipated stock market debuts of the last few years.
“I got so comfortable under Autopilot, that I ended up blowing by exits because I was immersed in emails or calls (I know, I know, not a recommended use),” said the automaker’s president Jon McNeill in an email after he tried out the feature in a Model X. Now the email is being used in a lawsuit against Tesla.
Singapore-based semiconductor firm Silicon Box will invest 3.2 billion euros ($3.50 billion) in a new plant in northern Italy under a government-backed deal, the Italian industry ministry said on Monday.
Two top Republican senators are introducing legislation on Monday that would require some U.S. government-owned spectrum be auctioned off to boost commercial wireless 5G networks.
The Bank of Japan said it made no purchases of Japanese exchange-traded funds on Monday despite local shares dropping sharply, stoking speculation that a shift away from ultra-supportive monetary policy is imminent.