LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman has been immersed in Silicon Valley since his August 1967 birth in Palo Alto, California, in the shadow of Stanford University, where he and fellow technology luminary Peter Thiel became friends as college students during the 1980s.
The political circus may have been in town in D.C. this week with a host of contentious hearings for a series of President Trump’s Cabinet nominees, but it was also down in Florida where Trump was hosting a GOP retreat at his Doral golf course.
Matthew Yglesias, Tribune News Service Shortly after assembling America’s leading technology CEOs to pay homage to him at his inauguration, Donald
The LinkedIn founder talks about his new book, ‘Superagency,’ and argues that people can use AI to reshape their daily work lives.
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman has been immersed in Silicon Valley since his August 1967 birth in Palo Alto, California, in the shadow of Stanford University, where he and fellow technology
Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn founder, has been influential in Silicon Valley since 1967. He co-founded PayPal with Peter Thiel and is now worth $2.6 billion, advocating for AI's potential in his book 'Superagency,
What Could Possibly Go Right with Our AI Future," the LinkedIn co-founder makes the case that AI can extend human
Tesla Inc. disappointed investors on Thursday, reporting sales of 495,570 electric vehicles in the fourth quarter and of 1.789 million for all of 2024, falling slightly short of Wall Street ...
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman and Siddhartha Mukherjee, cancer researcher and author of the book “The Emperor of All Maladies,” have co-founded an
This is an audio transcript of the Tech Tonic podcast episode: ‘Tech in 2025 — The view from Silicon Valley’
Tensions between technology leaders Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman were on full display this week after the Tesla CEO slammed the new artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure project,
Hoffman isn’t the only prominent Silicon Valley figure betting on A.I.’s promise in medical research. The new technology is expected to generate between $60 billion and $110 billion annually in value for the pharmaceutical and medical-product industries, according to a McKinsey report released last year.