Google CIO Ruth Porat said at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the tech giant is ready to get to work with the returning president.
I’ll be the first to acknowledge the counter arguments. There are areas where the Trump presidency is bound to slow things down. Companies will be less likely to invest in nascent sectors that rely on supportive government dollars or policy, meaning that technologies like hydrogen and biofuels may take a hit.
Business Insider's diary takes you behind the scenes on day three of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
A day-long event filled with MIT speakers, including Sally Kornbluth and Sir Tim Berners-Lee, touched on AI sustainability and US-China competition.
Has the merry-go-round of the global elite summit – epitomised by the World Economic Forum (WEF) at Davos, which concluded this weekend – had its day? As I saw at Davos when I was editor of
The UK’s competition watchdog is to investigate the mobile ecosystems of Apple and Google under new digital market rules that could see pro-competition interventions placed upon them.
Now, as Trump returns to the White House thanks, partially, to money from Silicon Valley, it stands to reason that the big tech platforms currently suffering from European regulatory scrutiny would want it to end. As tech CEOs line up to schmooze with the president, this is surely what companies like Apple, Meta, and Amazon were hoping for.
Officials and business executives at the annual gathering in Switzerland said the fight against global climate change would continue with or without the United States.
The Motwani Jadeja Foundation (MJF) proudly hosted a delegation of 10 Indian leaders at Davos, Switzerland during the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2025. For the first time, these leaders had the unique opportunity to participate in one of the world's most prestigious platforms for networking and collaboration.
Andhra Pradesh is revitalising business under Nara Lokesh's leadership, focusing on attracting investment and enhancing infrastructure, says Nara Lokesh. With several major projects already underway,
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump said he had once sought approval for a project in Ireland, but ditched it once he was told that it would take “five to six years ... And I said, ‘You have to be kidding.'"
Nara Lokesh, Andhra Pradesh’s Minister for Human Resources Development, IT and Electronics and RTG, shares his vision for the state’s future in an exclusive interview with Siddharth Zarabi, Editor, Business Today.