Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has made a series of moves that realign his company to operate under the second Trump administration. Reuters
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has made a series of moves that realign his company to operate under the second Trump administration. Reuters
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has made a series of moves that realign his company to operate under the second Trump administration. Reuters
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has made a series of moves that realign his company to operate under the second Trump administration. Reuters

Big Tech's public race to curry favour with Donald Trump


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Big Tech executives are racing to secure influence with Donald Trump’s second administration, using it as a fresh opportunity to reset relations with the mercurial president-elect.

Meta and other Silicon Valley firms including Amazon and OpenAI have donated $1 million or more to Mr Trump's inaugural fund (Meta did not donate to Mr Trump's 2017 inauguration or Joe Biden's 2021 inauguration).

And chief executive Mark Zuckerberg was among a number of executives to hold court with Mr Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida since the election.

The conciliatory overtures by Silicon Valley show that its executives are hoping to turn over a new leaf with the future president, who once suggested Mr Zuckerberg could “spend the rest of his life in prison” and has previously bashed Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos.

Mr Bezos has made a number of moves in recent months, blocking the Washington Post's (which he owns) endorsement of Kamala Harris, and rejecting a cartoonist's sketch that showed the Amazon boss bowing down to Mr Trump. Amazon Prime Video also announced it is licensing a documentary film about first lady Melania Trump.

Meta has also been lurching towards a more MAGA-friendly position. The company on Tuesday said it is ditching fact-checking system with “community notes” – similar to the ones on Elon Musk's platform X – in what he said would bring the company “back to our roots around free expression”.

He also said the company would remove topics on topics such as immigration and gender that he said are “just out of touch with mainstream discourse”, and pledged to work with Mr Trump to “push back on governments around the world that are going after American companies and pushing to censor more”.

Meta is also realigning some of its team to be better positioned under the new administration.

The company on Monday named UFC president and Trump ally Dana White, a popular figure among conservative white males, to its board of directors.

Former George W Bush official Joel Kaplan is now Meta's chief global affairs officer, replacing Nick Clegg, formerly the leader of the UK's Liberal Democrats. Mr Kaplan defended the company's decision to move end its fact-checking system, saying that the programme “too often became a tool to censor”.

Republican Kevin Martin was also elevated to vice president of global public policy and Jennifer Newstead, who served in the State Department from 2017-2019, was recently named Meta's general counsel, Semafor reported.

According to CNBC, Microsoft also recently acknowledged that it had donated $1 million to Mr Trump's inauguration fund, although the company also pointed out that it had previously donated $500,000 to Joe Biden's inauguration fund, and $500,000 to Mr Trump's fund after his first White House victory in 2016.

Meanwhile, Apple's Tim Cook also joined other Big Tech executives in donating to Mr Trump's inaugural fund. Mr Cook, once nicknamed “Tim Apple” by Mr Trump, also donated $1 million to the inauguration, Axios reported. The company donated $57,000 to his 2017 fund.

Those reports are the latest in what has been a curious, occasionally contentious but almost always civil relationship between Apple and Mr Trump.

Mr Trump in 2016 threatened to enact tariffs on Apple products for manufacturing devices overseas, only to ask Mr Cook to serve on the administration's American workforce policy advisory board three years later.

Artificial intelligence

Some companies are posturing for a technology far more pervasive today than in 2017: artificial intelligence.

Microsoft is publicly offering suggestions to the incoming Trump White House on how to capitalise what it calls a “golden opportunity for American AI”.

“The country has a unique opportunity to pursue this vision and build on the foundational ideas set for AI policy during President Trump’s first term,” Microsoft vice chair Brad Smith wrote in a lengthy blog post on Friday.

“Achieving this vision will require a partnership that unites leaders from government, the private sector, and the country’s educational and non-profit institutions.”

Then, of course, there are the new technology companies on the block, like OpenAI, which helped put artificial intelligence into mainstream with its ChatGPT tool.

The best indicator for what to expect from Mr Trump's AI policy is likely the Republican Party’s official 2024 platform published back in July. The platform pledged to support AI development “rooted in free speech and human flourishing”, it read in part.

Mr Trump signed an executive order during his first term which sought to “drive technological breakthroughs in AI” while “reducing barriers to the use of AI technologies.”

OpenAI chief Altman said he looks forward to working with Mr Trump on how to harness the new technology, saying the US must lead the tech race against rival China.

“I think it’s very important to the American innovation economy and our position in the world that we allow our small companies to do what they do,” he said during a Fox News segment on Sunday.

“We clearly had regulatory overreach as a country.”

One tech executive who has not yet been invited to Mar-a-Lago is Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang, although he told Bloomberg Television he would be happy to meet with the president-elect and offered to help the coming administration.

A change of pace

Some say that amid the re-emergence of Donald Trump in the White House, those in the most prominent of technology circles have learned how to navigate based on Mr Trump's first term.

"In the upcoming Trump era, it isn’t enough to have great tech or a strong sales team," said Sam Blatteis, chief executive of The Mena Catalysts, a market entry firm for Web3 multinationals expanding in the Gulf economies.

American tech executive Sam Blatteis said that the reemergence of Donald Trump means that the power gap is closing in Washington, but that the ideological gap is widening. Photo: Antonie Robertson
American tech executive Sam Blatteis said that the reemergence of Donald Trump means that the power gap is closing in Washington, but that the ideological gap is widening. Photo: Antonie Robertson

"Relationships will play an outsized role, and high tech companies must take a crash course in ‘spoken MAGA’. It is a special language — different than how they communicated with the Biden White House," he explained, referring to Mr Trump's inward looking campaign theme, 'Make America great Again'.

Mr Blatteis said that it's not necessarily a surprise that president-elect Trump has become the the "man to see" among US technology executives in the know, but no matter how well they think they know Mr Trump, he warned, they'll probably have to get used to unpredictability being the new normal.

"As Trump appoints an armada of new policymakers to run key tech-related agencies, who is running them, and how much real influence they have, is hard to pin down," he said.

"It’s about quietly having the right conversations ... politics will become more important than traditional commercial business plans in shaping market outcomes," he added.

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Living in...

This article is part of a guide on where to live in the UAE. Our reporters will profile some of the country’s most desirable districts, provide an estimate of rental prices and introduce you to some of the residents who call each area home.

What is dialysis?

Dialysis is a way of cleaning your blood when your kidneys fail and can no longer do the job.

It gets rid of your body's wastes, extra salt and water, and helps to control your blood pressure. The main cause of kidney failure is diabetes and hypertension.

There are two kinds of dialysis — haemodialysis and peritoneal.

In haemodialysis, blood is pumped out of your body to an artificial kidney machine that filter your blood and returns it to your body by tubes.

In peritoneal dialysis, the inside lining of your own belly acts as a natural filter. Wastes are taken out by means of a cleansing fluid which is washed in and out of your belly in cycles.

It isn’t an option for everyone but if eligible, can be done at home by the patient or caregiver. This, as opposed to home haemodialysis, is covered by insurance in the UAE.

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What can victims do?

Always use only regulated platforms

Stop all transactions and communication on suspicion

Save all evidence (screenshots, chat logs, transaction IDs)

Report to local authorities

Warn others to prevent further harm

Courtesy: Crystal Intelligence

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Daily cash awards of $1,000 dollars will sweeten the Madrasa e-learning project by tempting more pupils to an education portal to deepen their understanding of math and sciences.

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“The objective of the Madrasa is to become the number one reference for all Arab students in the world. The 5,000 videos we have online is just the beginning, we have big ambitions. Today in the Arab world there are 50 million students. We want to reach everyone who is willing to learn.”

A general guide to how active you are:

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Updated: January 10, 2025, 6:00 PM