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When Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg poached Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang last week as part of a $14.3 billion investment in the artificial intelligence startup, he was apparently just getting started.

Zuckerberg’s multibillion-dollar AI hiring spree has now turned to Daniel Gross, the CEO of Ilya Sutskever’s startup Safe Superintelligence, and former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, according to sources with knowledge of the matter.

It’s not how Zuckerberg planned for a deal to go down.

Earlier this year, sources said, Meta tried to acquire Safe Superintelligence, which was reportedly valued at $32 billion in a fundraising round in April. Sutskever, who just launched the startup a year ago, shortly after leaving OpenAI, rebuffed Meta’s efforts, as well as the company’s attempt to hire him, said the sources, who asked not to be named because the information is confidential.

Soon after those talks ended, Zuckerberg started negotiating with Gross, the sources said. In addition to his role at Safe Superintelligence, Gross runs a venture capital firm with Friedman called NFDG, their combined initials.

Both men are joining Meta as part of the transaction, and will work on products under Wang, one source said. Meta, meanwhile, will get a stake in NFDG, according to multiple sources.

The Information was first to report on Meta’s plans to hire Gross and Friedman.

Gross, Friedman and Sutskever didn’t respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.

A Meta spokesperson said the company “will share more about our superintelligence effort and the great people joining this team in the coming weeks.”

Zuckerberg’s aggressive hiring tactics escalate an AI talent war that’s reached new heights of late. Meta, Google and OpenAI, along with a host of other big companies and high-valued startups, are racing to develop the most powerful large language models, and pushing towards artificial general intelligence (AGI), or AI that’s considered equal to or greater than human intelligence.

Last week, Meta agreed to pump $14.3 billion into Scale AI to bring on Wang and a few other top engineers while getting a 49% stake in the startup.

Altman said on the latest episode of the “Uncapped” podcast, which is hosted by his brother, that Meta has tried to lure OpenAI employees by offering signing bonuses as high as $100 million, with even larger annual compensation packages. Altman said “none of our best people have decided to take them up on that.”

“I’ve heard that Meta thinks of us as their biggest competitor,” Altman said on the podcast. “Their current AI efforts have not worked as well as they have hoped and I respect being aggressive and continuing to try new things.”

Meta didn’t respond to a request for comment on Altman’s remarks.

OpenAI, for its part, has gone to similar lengths, paying about $6.5 billion to hire iPhone designer Jony Ive and to acquire his nascent devices startup io.

Elsewhere, the founders of AI startup Character.AI were recruited back to Google last year in a multibillion-dollar deal, while DeepMind co-founder Mustafa Suleyman was brought on by Microsoft in a $650 million purchase of talent from Inflection AI.

In Gross, Zuckerberg is getting a longtime entrepreneur and AI investor. Gross founded the search engine Cue, which was acquired by Apple in 2013. He was a top executive at Apple and helped lead machine learning efforts and the development of Siri. He was later a partner at startup accelerator Y Combinator, before co‑founding Safe Superintelligence alongside Sutskever.

Friedman co-founded two startups before becoming the CEO of GitHub following Microsoft’s acquisition of the code-sharing platform in 2018.

NFDG has backed Coinbase, Figma, CoreWeave, Perplexity and Character.ai over the years, according to Pitchbook. It’s unclear what happens to its investment portfolio in a Meta deal, a source said.

WATCH: Zuckerberg, Altman feud for top AI talent

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Palo Alto CEO Nikesh Arora confronts Wall Street skeptics after company’s biggest bet yet

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Palo Alto CEO Nikesh Arora confronts Wall Street skeptics after company’s biggest bet yet

Nikesh Arora of the United States on the first hole during the third round of The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at The Old Course on October 02, 2021 in St Andrews, Scotland.

David Cannon | David Cannon Collection | Getty Images

When Nikesh Arora was named CEO of Palo Alto Networks in June 2018, the cybersecurity company was valued at about $19 billion and was taking on large networking vendors like Cisco and Juniper, which were building security into their products.

Seven years later, Palo Alto’s market cap has expanded by sixfold, driven in part by an acquisition spree that’s seen Arora spearhead more than 20 deals in an effort to create a one-stop shop for all things cybersecurity.

Arora’s ambitions took a dramatic turn last week, when Palo Alto announced by far its biggest bet to date: the $25 billion purchase of Israeli identity security platform CyberArk.

Wall Street’s reaction so far has been downbeat, with multiple analysts downgrading the stock, and the shares dropping 16% since news of the deal first leaked out last Tuesday.

Not only does CyberArk represent Palo Alto’s heftiest deal in the 20 years since its founding, but it’s the second-biggest U.S. tech acquisition announced in 2025, after Alphabet’s $32 billion purchase of Wiz, another cloud security company from Israel.

Alphabet had become a more notable player in Palo Alto’s universe even before the calendar turned. In the company’s 2024 annual report published in October, Palo Alto named Alphabet as a competitor for the first time, listing it alongside Cisco and Microsoft as companies “that have acquired, or may acquire, security vendors and have the technical and financial resources to bring competitive solutions to the market.” In 2023, Cisco paid $28 billion for Splunk, which focuses on data protection.

The era of cybersecurity megadeals coincides with a surge in the number of sophisticated cybercrimes tied to rapid advancements in artificial intelligence.

With CyberArk, Palo Alto is making a big splash in the identity management market, taking on the likes of Okta as well as Microsoft and IBM’s HashiCorp. It also puts the company into further competition with CrowdStrike, the other pure-play security company that’s topped $100 billion in market cap.

Expect to see more tech M&A ahead, says Axios' Dan Primack

In an interview with CNBC soon after last week’s announcement, Arora said CyberArk fits squarely into his company’s focus on AI and, in this case, the complexities that come with granting permissions and access. Arora said that with M&A he looks for emerging trends, particularly when it involves technology that’s at a crossroads.

“Our entire acquisition strategy, our organic product growth strategy, our selling strategy, has always been based on that approach,” said Arora, 57, who’s seen his personal wealth top $1 billion with the big run-up in the stock.

In CyberArk’s earnings report last week, the company said revenue jumped 46% in the latest quarter to $328 million, equal to about 14% of Palo Alto revenue, based on the most recent report. Arora said in the conference call announcing the deal that he intends to work with CyberArk CEO Matt Cohen and Chairman Udi Mokady to “accelerate the pace of innovation.”

“We look for great products, a team that can execute in the product, and we let them run it,” Arora told CNBC. “This is going to be a different challenge, but we’ve done well 24 times, so I’m pretty confident that our team can handle this.”

Most of Arora’s acquisitions over the years have been of smaller startups. That includes a $400 million deal to buy Dig Security and the $625 million purchase of Talon Cyber Security in 2023. Last month, the company closed its takeover of Seattle-based startup Protect AI for an undisclosed amount.

Appetite for risk

Before joining Palo Alto, Arora spent a decade at Google, including his last three years there as chief business officer. Some analysts called him the “acting CEO,” due to his lengthy roster of responsibilities, such as strategic partnerships and navigating the needs of advertisers.

In 2014, Arora left Google to join SoftBank as head of its internet and media operations business and vice chairman of the overall company. At SoftBank, Arora had been tapped as the likely successor to visionary founder and CEO Masayoshi Son. But less than two years after taking the job, Arora resigned. As he explained it, Son told him he was going to keep running the show for another five to 10 years.

Roughly 10 months before leaving SoftBank, Arora said he was buying more than $480 million worth of stock in the Japanese conglomerate, which he said involved taking an “enormous risk” reflecting his confidence “about the future” of the company.

While that’s all firmly in the past, Arora said that over the years, he’s “scavenged” different leadership qualities from each of his mentors, including an appetite for risk from Son.

“It’s about finding role models for certain behaviors and wanting to understand what makes them really successful,” he said. “That’s my model.”

Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group Corp., speaks during the company’s annual general meeting in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, June 27, 2025.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Investors weren’t completely sold on Arora when he joined Palo Alto in 2018, said Joseph Gallo, an analyst at Jefferies. He was a skilled and experienced businessman but some worried that he hadn’t created a notable product or founded a company like many of his industry peers, said Gallo, who recommends buying Palo Alto shares.

Arora made up for it with an ability to spot trends ahead of the curve, Gallo said. That included investing aggressively in a transition from on-premises technology to the cloud and then recognizing early the power of AI.

In his first few years at the company, Arora made numerous acquisitions for a total of about $3 billion, helping Palo Alto penetrate the cloud security space as more businesses were moving their workloads to Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google’s cloud.

“Every company wishes they were in Palo Alto shoes, where they could actually offer all these different products,” said Andrew Nowinski, an analyst at Wells Fargo who has a buy recommendation on the stock. “It’s very difficult. You’re not going to see many vendors like Palo Alto.”

With its expansion into identity management, Palo Alto is going big in a space that’s viewed by experts as a key spending area for IT in the coming years.

“You can’t slow down your spending because the hackers aren’t slowing down,” Nowinski said. “That’s your growth driver.”

Ofer Schreiber, senior partner and head of YL Ventures’ Israel office, said Palo Alto has helped take an extremely fragmented market, consisting of lots of point solutions, and created a centralized vendor for clients.

According to a joint report from IBM and Palo Alto published in January, the average organization uses 83 different security products from 29 separate companies.

“From the customer’s perspective, it’s much more convenient dealing with with one vendor with multiple products tightly integrated,” Schreiber said. “You can’t really be just a one-product company.”

Still, Arora is in untested waters with CyberArk.

Palo Alto’s shares dropped on all five days following the announcement of the deal. It’s the first time at Palo Alto that Arora has led a multibillion-dollar purchase, and he now faces the execution challenges of integrating thousands of new employees.

Analysts at KeyBanc lowered their rating to the equivalent of hold from buy, due partly to concerns about a lack of “meaningful synergies” in the product offerings and a view that customers would prefer an “independent vendor solely focused on identity.”

But TD Cowen’s Shaul Eyal still recommends buying the shares. He said that what’s made Arora successful is his “relentless focus on execution” and his strategy of betting on sizeable markets where Palo Alto can quickly scale and become the leader or runner-up.

That, and his ability to bundle.

“It’s all about upsell,” Eyal said. “Every other second, third, fourth module you’re selling to an existing customer flows straight to the bottom line.”

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Palo Alto Networks CEO on acquisition: CyberArk is poised to 'disrupt' the market

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Former X CEO Linda Yaccarino takes helm at digital health company eMed

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Former X CEO Linda Yaccarino takes helm at digital health company eMed

Linda Yaccarino, CEO of X Corp., attends the Milken Institute Global Conference 2025 in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 5, 2025.

Mike Blake | Reuters

Linda Yaccarino, the former chief executive of Elon Musk’s social media platform X, is pivoting into health care.

The digital health company eMed Population Health on Tuesday announced it has appointed Yaccarino as its new CEO. EMed is developing a population health management platform for the blockbuster weight loss and diabetes drugs called GLP-1s, the company said. It had raised a total $22 million as of 2022, according to PitchBook.

Yaccarino, who rose rose to the top of NBCUniversal’s global advertising business before joining X, will help eMed establish “game-changing partnerships” and navigate complex markets, the company said.

“The healthcare industry has been disrupted by technology, but not yet completely transformed by it,” Yaccarino said in a statement. “There is an opportunity to combine technology, lifestyle, and data in a new powerful way through the digital channels that impact consumers directly in ways that have never been done before.”

EMed is part of the growing group of digital health companies that are trying to capitalize on the sky-high demand for GLP-1s. Goldman Sachs analysts expect 15 million U.S. adults to be on anti-obesity drugs by 2030, and they predict the industry could reach $100 billion in annual revenue by that time.

Yaccarino stepped down from her role as CEO at X in July and did not disclose a reason for her departure. EMed said she is a “highly sought-after leader” with an “undeniable ability to negotiate new partnerships.”

“To be a leader in today’s healthcare marketplace, companies need to have a fearless tenacity that allows them to not only grow, but to also be brave enough to step forward and redefine an entire industry,” Yaccarino said.

WATCH: Linda Yaccarino steps down as CEO of Elon Musk’s X after two years in the role

Linda Yaccarino steps down as CEO of Elon Musk’s X after two years in the role

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Palantir stock pops 8% after blowout quarter driven by AI, efficiency demand

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Palantir stock pops 8% after blowout quarter driven by AI, efficiency demand

Palantir reports $1 billion in revenue for the first time

Palantir stock popped more than 8% Tuesday after the software analytics provider lifted its full-year outlook, boosted by the artificial intelligence wave.

CEO Alex Karp called the earnings results a “once in a generation, truly anomalous quarter” during an earnings call with analysts.

“We’re very proud and we’re sorry that our haters are disappointed, but there are many more quarters to be disappointed, and we’re working on that too,” he added.

U.S. revenues grew 68% year over year $733 million, while U.S. commercial revenues nearly doubled to $306 million.

Palantir’s U.S. government revenues rose 53% from the year-ago period to $426 million as the company continues to benefit from President Donald Trump‘s focus on efficiency.

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The company’s revenues grew 48% and topped $1 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time ever. That surpassed the $940 million in revenues forecast by analysts polled by LSEG.

“‘I’ve been cautioned to be a little modest about our bombastic numbers, but honestly, there’s no authentic way to be anything but have enormous pride and gratefulness about these extraordinary numbers,” he said.

Adjusted earnings came in at 16 cents per share and ahead of the 14-cent-per-share estimate. Net income jumped 144% to about $326.7 million, or 13 cents per share. That’s up from $134.1 million, or 6 cents per share a year ago.

Palantir also upped its full-year guidance.

The company now expects revenues to range between $4.142 billion and $4.150 billion. That’s up from its previous forecast calling for $3.89 billion to $3.90 billion.

Palantir shares have soared more than 120% this year and the company’s market cap topped $400 billion due to ongoing AI tailwinds and a bet on its contracts with the government.

Last week, the company joined the list of 20 most valuable U.S. companies after joining the top 10 U.S. tech firms club in May.

However, investors are paying a hefty multiple for a company that makes a fraction of revenue relative to many of its peers. Shares currently trade 277 times forward earnings.

Analysts have raised concerns about the company’s growth and valuation.

Jefferies analyst Brent Thill maintained an underperform rating following the results, citing a “disconnected between valuation and achievable growth.”

While PLTR carries a rich valuation premium and remains a high-risk investment, the one-of-a-kind growth [plus] margin model puts it into a unique category of one that warrants a premium, in our view,” wrote Piper Sandler’s Brent Bracelin, who is overweight on shares.

WATCH: Palantir reports $1 billion in revenue for the first time

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