As President Trump issues directives to scuttle every federal government initiative that promotes diversity, equity and inclusion, tech
DeepSeek's large-language-model launch could wipe nearly $1 trillion in market value from the biggest U.S. tech companies.
Tech stocks tumbled as Chinese AI startup DeepSeek's advances raised fears of intensified competition, shaking investor confidence. Follow Newsweek's live blog.
During her 15 years at Microsoft, "I was looking at thousands of resumes a year," says Sabina Nawaz. Here are two job interview red flags that stand out to her.
Security experts have warned Windows BitLocker vulnerability could expose sensitive data in RAM, including passwords—what you need to do.
While Google and Microsoft go head-to-head over Chrome versus Edge and Google Search versus Bing, the much bigger spat is over AI. Google has now taken Gemini to its next level, causing consternation across some users at the difficulties in disabling the features on platforms such as Gmail.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had the quote of the week in response to a question from CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin about Elon Musk questioning the ability of the new Stargate Project's financial backers to invest up to $500 billion in AI infrastructure.
Chris Young, Microsoft's head of of business development and its venture unit, M12, resigned from his role on Wednesday, the company said.
Starting next month, if you don't want the browser to remember your Microsoft login credentials, you'll have to manually log out or open the page in private browsing mode. Here's why.
When President Donald Trump joined tech executives on Tuesday to tout a multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence project led in part by OpenAI, one question sprang to mind: Where’s Microsoft Corp.?
The new agreement “includes changes to the exclusivity on new capacity, moving to a model where Microsoft has a right of first refusal (ROFR),” Microsoft says. “To further support OpenAI, Microsoft has approved OpenAI’s ability to build additional capacity, primarily for research and training of models.”