Looks like AI is not the great disruptor everyone says it is. At least, not in
Results showed that Google-parent Alphabet generated $74.6 billion in second-quarter 2023 revenues, up 7% year over year, and $18.3 billion in net income โ an increase from the $16 billion booked in the same quarter last year. "Our financial results reflect continued resilience in Search, with an acceleration of revenue growth in both Search and YouTube, as well as momentum in Cloud," Alphabet CFO Ruth Porat said in a
This particular news should provide some comfort to Google CEO Sundar Pichai who was already
Nonetheless, analysts said Google has been an
"Contrary to fears, AI everywhere is not, at least now, causing margin indigestion, or disrupting search. On the contrary, it appears to have potential to make Google a share-gainer in cloud services," Rosenblatt Securities analyst Barton Crockett wrote in a note to clients, Reuters
Google wasn't the only one that surprised Wall Street with its financial results. Microsoft too posted better-than-expected quarterly results last week, showing a year-over-year
Microsoft is among a handful of companies vying to secure graphic cards from
Google ranked #12 on HackerNoon's Tech Company Rankings this week, while Microsoft was on the #14 spot.
World Citizen? Not So Fast! ๐
Apparently not satisfied with the success of ChatGPT, OpenAI co-founder and CEO Sam Altman now wants to create a new world order.. Of sorts. Last week, he launched a crypto-backed venture called Worldcoin which has already raised eyebrows with governments around the world.
Worldcoin is designed to become the world's largest human identity and financial network, giving ownership to everyone, according to its
In exchange for letting a futuristic looking globe scan your eyes, the project offers a digital ID signifying that you are a real human being (and not a robot, duh) and some cryptocurrency. Free cryptocurrency is not so bad, but giving over your biometric data is, prompting officials in
Most of these users don't seem to care about privacy concerns and seem to have been lured by the prospect of
Oh well..
๐ Youโre reading part 2 of HackerNoon's Tech Company News Brief, a weekly collection of tech goodness that combines HackerNoon's proprietary data with internet trends to determine which companies are rising and falling in the public consciousness. Part 1 went live yesterday. Prefer reading the whole thing a day early AND in one go? No problemo! Just subscribe here to receive the complete newsletter in your inbox every Tuesday.
In Other News.. ๐ฐ
- Sony PlayStation 5 console sales pass 40 million โ via
Reuters . - LinkedIn seems to be working on an AI โcoachโ for job applications โ via
The Verge . - Zuck Says He's 'Not Sure' if the Elon Cage Match Will Happen โ via
Gizmodo . - Twitter, now X, threatens suit against nonprofit studying hate speech and misinformation โ via
CNBC . - OpenAIโs head of trust and safety is stepping down โ via
CNN . - Scoop: Google Assistant to get an AI makeover โ via
Axios .
And that's a wrap! Don't forget to share this newsletter with your family and friends! See y'all next week. PEACE! โฎ๏ธ
โ Sheharyar Khan, Editor, Business Tech @ HackerNoon