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Speaking in Tokyo at a gathering of SoftBank’s corporate customers, Son said the AI agents will make each employee like a “thousand-armed deity,” dramatically increasing each person’s ...
The inquiry, known formally as a second request for information, suggests the acquisition may undergo an extended government review, the report said. SoftBank announced the purchase of the startup ...
TOKYO—SoftBank’s 99840.45%increase; green up pointing triangle founder wants to make his company the world leader in artificial superintelligence—a hypothetical form of AI that is smarter ...
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son aims to position the company as a leading platform provider in the artificial super intelligence sector within the next decade, with major investments in companies like ...
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son used a shareholders’ meeting on Friday to discuss the company’s belief in OpenAI and the coming of “artificial superintelligence.” ...
SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son on Friday said he wants the Japanese technology investment group to become the biggest platform provider for "artificial super intelligence" within the next 10 years.
SoftBank Backs Startup Building Giant Floating Climate Stations New Mexico-based Sceye is building high-altitude platform stations, designed to provide environmental monitoring and connectivity.
SoftBank Group Corp. founder and CEO Masayoshi Son reportedly has plans to develop a $1 trillion industrial complex in Arizona to build artificial intelligence and robots, according to a report.
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son is pitching Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company on a massive $1 trillion complex in the US to build robots and artificial intelligence, according to a report.
The investing conglomerate is looking to team up with TSMC on the initiative as SoftBank continues to pour money into AI.
(Reuters) -SoftBank Group founder Masayoshi Son is envisaging setting up a $1 trillion industrial complex in Arizona that will build robots and artificial intelligence, Bloomberg News reported on ...
T-Mobile stock dropped following reports Japanese investment group SoftBank sold millions of the U.S. telecommunication giant’s shares.