Oracle has told customers that a hacker broke into a computer system and stole old client log-in credential, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday, citing two people familiar with the matter.
The co-founder of Oracle and friend of President Trump, who was a flamboyant fixture in the 1990s, has returned to the spotlight through — of all things — TikTok.
With an April 5 deadline looming for the TikTok ban, President Trump will reportedly be briefed on a plan to keep it running. The post TikTok Ban Deadline Nears.
Artificial intelligence (AI) stocks have been some of the top performers on Wall Street over the last few years. Yet, just like any other sector, they come in many different shapes and sizes.
The venture capital firm is reportedly in talks to invest in TikTok as part of a bid led by Oracle and other American investors looking to buy out TikTok from ByteDance, according to the Financial Times.
Tech giant Oracle is facing criticism for how it's handling two seemingly separate data breaches.
Is Oracle (ORCL -3.47%) stock a buy now? That's a more complicated question than you might think.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is probing the cyberattack at Oracle as the hackers broke into the cloud computing company's computer systems and stole patient data, Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
CNBC's Seema Mody joins 'The Exchange' to discuss the future of TikTok in the U.S.
Even though investing in publicly traded companies made Warren Buffett the legend that he is, the celebrated investor hasn't been all that enthusiastic about stocks lately. Recently, his Berkshire Hathaway investment vehicle has much preferred buying U.S. Treasury bills and maintaining a large cash pile to load up on equities when the opportunity presents itself.
Oracle (ORCL -1.28%) stock got off to a shaky start in 2025 and it's trading down about 9% so far as of this writing. The drop-off is due to multiple factors, ranging from overall negativity in tech stocks thanks to the tariff-induced trade war that has led investors to enter a risk-off mode to questions about the viability of the billions of dollars being poured into artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure.
Rimini Street provides cost-effective, customizable third-party software support globally, which basically offers substantial savings versus direct vendor options. A recent appellate court decision significantly reduced Rimini's legal risks from its longstanding copyright infringement litigation with Oracle. Naturally, RMNI's recent cash burn remains a near-term risk.