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In a packed Las Vegas arena, Nvidia founder Jensen Huang stood on stage and marvelled over the crisp real-time computer graphics displayed on the screen behind him. He watched as a dark-haired woman walked through ornate gilded double doors and took in the rays of light that poured in through stained glass windows. The amount of geometry that you saw was absolutely insane, Huang told an audience of thousands at CES 2025 Monday night. It would have been impossible without artificial intelligence. The chipmaker and AI darling unveiled its GeForce RTX 50 Series desktop and laptop GPUs its most advanced consumer graphics processor units for gamers, creators and developers. The tech is designed for use on both desktop and laptop computers. Ahead of Huang's speech, Nvidia stock climbed 3.4 per cent to top its record set in November. Nvidia and other AI stocks keep climbing even as criticism rises that their stock prices have already shot too high, too fast. Despite worries about a ...
US antitrust enforcers have decided to investigate the roles Microsoft, Nvidia and OpenAI have played in the artificial intelligence boom, according to people familiar with the pending actions. The Department of Justice will launch an investigation of chipmaker Nvidia, while the Federal Trade Commission will scrutinise close business partners Microsoft and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, according to two people who were not authorised to publicly discuss details of the investigations and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. Nvidia and OpenAI declined to comment Thursday. Microsoft didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The New York Times was first to report Thursday on a deal between antitrust regulators at the two agencies. Emboldened by President Joe Biden's push for tougher scrutiny of Big Tech's business practices, federal officials have signalled for more than a year that they've been watching out for monopolistic behaviour in the rapidly advancing ...