A time lapse of Stargate I construction in Abilene, Texas. Imagery from April 26, 2024, to September 29, 2025 (Copernicus) |
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- Meta announced in May that Meta AI had crossed that threshold, saying that more than 1 billion people are using the product every month.
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Yesterday, the company announced that it will begin using your conversations and messages with Meta AI to personalize your recommendations and the ads you see.
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Meta currently monetizes your activity on Meta platforms by using your interactions (likes, shares, attention) to tailor your exposure to its massive advertising machine. So if you asked Meta AI about travel tips for your upcoming vacation, you might now see more content and ads related to that place.
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But what if you’re asking Meta AI how to deal with your depression or other sensitive topics? The company says it doesn’t plan on using those discussions as grist for the advertising mill: “When people have conversations with Meta AI about topics such as their religious views, sexual orientation, political views, health, racial or ethnic origin, philosophical beliefs, or trade union membership, as always, we don’t use those topics to show them ads.”
Still, Meta has a spotty record when it comes to protecting sensitive personal information from leaking into its ad platform. In the past, Meta’s pixel-tracking technology has been found to pick up sensitive information regarding mental health crises, financial information, and medical information.
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The company said users will start to see notifications about the changes this month, which will go into effect on December 16, 2025. If anything, it’ll be an important moment for the AI industry as a whole, and investors in lots of different companies, public and private, will likely be closely eyeing what the company reports if and how AI has juiced its advertising business. If the playbook is as profitable as Meta hopes it is, lots of other players are bound to copy it, after all.
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Shares of Lithium Americas finished Wednesday up more than 23% after the miner announced a nonbinding agreement for the US government to receive an equity position in the company in exchange for providing accelerated funding of a loan and offering more favorable repayment terms.
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The DOE would get a 5% equity stake in the company via warrants in exchange for advancing $435 million of its previously announced loan (now worth a total of $2.23 billion) to Lithium Americas this quarter, as well as deferring interest payments on $182 million of those funds for five years.
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The first draw of Lithium Americas’ loan from the DOE is slated to be used to advance its joint venture with General Motors, a mine being developed in northern Nevada.
- The DOE will also receive a 5% nonvoting, nontransferable economic stake in this particular project, also via warrants.
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“This proposed stake is another example of the Trump Administration taking equity stakes with American companies to promote industries seen as critical to national security with the majority of lithium reserves coming from foreign adversaries, especially China with the Thacker Pass Facility Buildout seen as crucial to national security,” Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives wrote. “This is important as the Trump Administration is now looking far and wide (globally) for stakes in strategic companies, not just US names.”
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The behemoth data center plan once had the code name “Project Ludicrous,” and in the eight months since Stargate was announced, the scale and ambition of the project have only grown seemingly more, well, ludicrous. How will the companies backing it raise all that cash? How many gigawatts of power will it provide? We pulled together what’s known, what’s still developing, and made a time lapse of the build so far, too.
A timeline of the project to date. |
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Yesterday’s Big Daily Movers |
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What are Americans’ favorite and least favorite business sectors? |
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- A growing number of corporate boards have turned to the co-CEO model. Here’s how those stocks perform
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Why is Reddit supposedly seeing less traffic from ChatGPT referrals? RBC Capital Markets has one theory; the AI chatbot itself has another
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Tesla’s September sales
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