President-elect Donald Trump announced a $20 billion investment into US building data centers by the Emirati company, but no details were released.
President-elect Trump announced Tuesday that Emirati billionaire Hussain Sajwani plans to invest $20 billion in the United States “over a very short period of time” to build data centers across
The announcement follows a pledge made last month by the Japanese billionaire investor Masayoshi Son, while at Trump's side, to invest $100 billion in the United States.Trump said at a news ...
Ishiba dined with SoftBank Group CEO Son Masayoshi at a restaurant in Tokyo ... Group will invest 100 billion dollars in the United States. Sources say Ishiba and Son exchanged opinions on future ...
President-elect Donald Trump announced a $20 billion data centre investment in the US by Emirati billionaire Hussain Sajwani's DAMAC Properties. The investment, linked to AI, cryptocurrency, and the digital economy,
The deal-focused orientation of President-elect Trump can serve as both the carrot and the stick in a new diplomatic paradigm.
A United Arab Emirates investment firm has pledged $20 billion to build new data centers targeting AI across a number of locations across the United States.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba dined with SoftBank Group Corp. Chairman and CEO Masayoshi Son on Tuesday in Tokyo, exchanging views on the economic policies of the incoming administration of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and artificial intelligence strategy.
Perhaps no document has ever had a more appropriate title than the “Interim Final Rule on Artificial Intelligence Diffusion” announced by the Biden
For Trump and his supporters, the time has come for a domestic conservative revolution to merge with a global movement, with the ultimate goal of totally transforming the political landscape of the West.
I wrote about former judge James Seishiro Burns and how he came to have a Japanese middle name. Burns was a son of Gov. John A. Burns. He married TV journalist Emme Tomimbang.
Masa first encountered Steve Jobs in the mid-1980s at the annual Comdex trade fair in Las Vegas. Sometime in the summer of 1998, they had their first serious conversation under a cherry tree at the Woodside, California, home of Larry Ellison, boss of the Oracle software group and a fellow Japanophile.