OpenAI CEO Sam Altman called Stargate, “the most important project for this era” and promised that all of the new investment his company was making would help cure diseases. Altman was actually prompted by Trump to talk about the medical advances that AI would supposedly figure out.
After scrapping the Biden administration’s executive order on artificial intelligence, President Donald Trump announced a half-a-trillion-dollar AI infrastructure plan alongside some of the technology’s top leaders.
On Tuesday night, President Donald Trump issued a pardon to Ross Ulbricht, who ran the dark web marketplace Silk Road under the pseudonym “Dread Pirate Roberts.” Ulbricht has been serving a life sentence without parole since 2015, when he was convicted of multiple charges, including the distribution of narcotics.
The $500 billion Stargate artificial intelligence project was officially announced by President Donald Trump at a press conference yesterday. Standing
Musk had said earlier that the Stargate Project, an initiative to build AI infrastructure across the US, with Masayoshi Son taking the role of chairman, doesn't have funds.
President Donald Trump spoke with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman by phone on Friday, ahead of the AI infrastructure announcement, CNBC has learned.
OpenAI, Softbank and Oracle will join forces to create Stargate, a new company investing $500 billion in AI infrastructure. President Donald Trump said of the investment: “A resounding
Elon Musk and Sam Altman are sparring over Donald Trump’s futuristic $500 billion artificial intelligence project. Musk landed the first blow by saying the tech firms behind the artificial intelligence infrastructure initiative didn’t have enough cash.
Elon Musk soured Pres. Donald Trump's $500B AI infrastructure announcement with "good authority" the funds were not secured.
Elon Musk openly questioned whether companies that joined President Donald Trump’s announcement promising hundreds of billions of dollars in artificial intelligence infrastructure could follow through on their promises,
According to a Department of Energy (DOE) report last month, the energy demand for U.S. data centers tripled over the past 10 years and is expected to double or triple by 2028. Data centers are also projected to consume between more than 6% to 12% of the U.S.’s electricity by 2028, according to the report.