Interesting reports recently surfaced around Magnificent Seven stock Meta Platforms NASDAQ: META. As first reported by The Information, Meta is in talks with one of India's most powerful firms to expand its presence in the country.
Meta has released the latest versions of its Llama artificial intelligence (AI) model. The tech giant says its Llama 4 models, unveiled Friday (April 4), are built on one of the most advanced large language models (LLMs) in the world.
While DeepSeek R1 and OpenAI o1 edge out Behemoth on a couple metrics, Llama 4 Behemoth remains highly competitive.
Meta released the first models from its latest open-source artificial intelligence software Llama 4, as the company scrambles to lead the race to invest in generative AI. But the Facebook owner said it has not yet released the biggest and most powerful Llama 4 model, which outperforms other AI models in its class and serves as "a teacher for our new models.
Meta Platforms on Saturday released the latest version of its large language model (LLM) Llama, called the Llama 4 Scout and Llama 4 Maverick.
Meta has released a new collection of AI models, Llama 4, in its Llama family — on a Saturday, no less.
Investing in growth stocks isn't always easy. Sure, it's fun when momentum is on your side and the stock is racing ahead of the broader market.
Meta Platforms is planning on spending nearly $1 billion on setting up a data center project in central Wisconsin as part of its investment in artificial intelligence technology, Bloomberg News reported on Friday.
Meta will no longer have any fact-checkers in the U.S. come Monday, according to Chief Global Affairs Officer Joel Kaplan.
Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, would not seem to be in the line of fire from tariffs. But President Trump's trade actions are hitting even social networking businesses.
Meta Platforms plans to release the latest version of its large language model later this month, after delaying it at least twice, the Information reported on Friday, as the Facebook owner scrambles to lead in the AI race.
"It's not over yet" when it comes to volatility and downside market action, says George Tsilis. He argues a policy shift from the Trump administration or the Fed will be needed for relief to take shape.