Alphabet recorded revenues of $283 billion for the entire 2022 fiscal year, up 10 percent compared to its revenues in 2021. The new fiscal report comes after Google laid off 12,000 of its employees.
Alphabet inc RSS
Google is the latest big tech firm to announce major layoffs following Microsoft and Amazon. The company is reducing its headcount by 12,000 and has encouraged employees to work from home today.
According to multiple reports from across the globe, YouTube was down on both mobile and PC platforms a little while ago. As per reports, it seems that it is back on for now, but not for everyone.
In addition to offices opening from June, Pichai also announced a day off in late May, so that employees can deal with the burnout resulted from working from home during the coronavirus pandemic.
After almost a decade with DeepMind, the company's co-founder, Mustafa Suleyman, will now be joining Google directly to work on applied artificial intelligence starting January next year.
Thanks to an update introduced today, users can now find more relevant podcasts on Google Search. Apart from them being easier to find, users can also listen to podcast episodes from search results.
Earlier this week Huawei was blacklisted by the U.S. government. As a result, the company can no longer import parts from American companies. Reportedly, Google has suspended all business with Huawei.
A group of investors led by Walmart is to buy a 73% stake in Indian online retailer Flipkart, for up to $16 billion. $3 billion of this will reportedly be a contribution from Alphabet Inc.
After a long career with Google and its parent company Alphabet Inc, the firm announced today that Eric Schmidt will be transitioning to the role of technical advisor starting in 2018.
Waymo and Intel have been working together for some time, but their collaboration is now official and the goal of a car that can continue driving after a request for human intervention is quite clear.
A few days ago, YouTubers noticed that the service was classifying some LGBTQ+ videos as "sensitive content" under the site's Restricted Mode. YouTube has now apologized, but has not clarified why.