TAIPEI, TAIWAN – 2023/05/29: Nvidia president and CEO Jensen Huang speaks at a keynote presentation while holding the Grace Hopper superchip at COMPUTEX. The COMPUTEX 2023 runs from 30 May to 02 June 2023 and gathers over 1,000 exhibitors from 26 different countries with 3000 booths to display their latest products and to sign orders with foreign buyers. (Photo by Walid Berrazeg/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
He says anyone can be a programmer, just by speaking to the computer, and the desired functions will come forth.
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No longer will programmers need to write lines of code, only for it to display the dreaded “fail to compile” because of a missing semicolon.
How will this be done? By generative artificial intelligence, Huang said during his keynote speech at the Computex forum in Taiwan on Monday.
At his first public keynote since the pandemic, Huang introduced a new AI supercomputer platform called DGX GH200, aimed at building generative AI models.
Generative AI is a type of artificial intelligence technology that can produce various types of content, including text, imagery, audio and synthetic data.
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“This computer doesn’t care how you program it, it will try to understand what you mean, because it has this incredible large language model capability. And so the programming barrier is incredibly low,” Huang pointed out.
“We have closed the digital divide. Everyone is a programmer. Now, you just have to say something to the computer.”
Nvidia says that generative AI is the “most important computing platform of our generation” as individuals and companies move to create new apps and leverage on generative AI in the process.
Every single computing era, you could do different things that weren’t possible before.
Jensen Huang
CEO, Nvidia
Creative professionals will be able to create images with a simple text prompt, while programmers can accelerate application development and debugging efforts, the company said. Even architects can generate 3D models from 2D floor plans.
“Every single computing era, you could do different things that weren’t possible before,” Huang said, adding that “artificial intelligence certainly qualifies.”
He explained that this computing era is “special in several ways”.
The CEO said generative AI is able to understand information other than just text and numbers. It “can now understand multimodality, which is the reason why this computing revolution can impact every industry,” he added.
Unlike traditional models of computer application development, which require new applications and new hardware to accommodate advances like A.I., Huang said generative A.I. will not only be able to impact new applications, but enhance old ones.
“Every application that exists will be better because of A.I…. It can succeed with old applications. And it’s going to have new applications. The rate of progress, because it’s so easy to use, is the reason why it’s growing so fast.”
Former Meta global affairs chief Nick Clegg said Friday that tech companies should keep a distance from politics and people should feel “uneasy” about those firms intervening in the public space.
“I generally don’t think that politics and tech innovation mixes very well,” Clegg told CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “I think it’s quite good when they kind of keep each other at a certain, respectful distance.”
President Donald Trump‘s deal with China this week to keep TikTok alive in the U.S. includes heavy doses of both elements, and the balance between the technology and political interests will be closely watched.
Clegg said two details should be especially looked at with TikTok: The safety of American data and the ownership of the algorithm, which he said would be “quite difficult” to share.
Clegg, who stepped down from his role at Meta earlier this year, questioned if U.S. data would be “kept safe here and not subject to surveillance,” but was also critical of other government efforts to silo data.
Clegg noted a recent legislative effort by India to impose “hard data localization” that would keep all data about citizens in India.
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“The moment countries start doing that, the dominoes will start to fall,” he said. “If everybody says, ‘No, we want our slice of the … data cake.’ Then, of course, the open data flows that drives the internet will start eroding.”
Trump’s executive order for the new TikTok structure establishes a joint-venture company to oversee TikTok’s U.S. data and algorithm, with Oracle controlling cloud services and running the app’s security operations, CNBC’s David Faber reported.
Neither China nor TikTok parent company ByteDance has commented on Trump’s Thursday executive order.
Clegg said the biggest risk to the internet is possibly the relationship between the U.S. and China, noting the potential of any fallout to push other countries into different policies.
He said the image of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi standing next to Chinese President Xi Jinping during a recent visit was “striking.”
“If India starts emulating China and starts trying to sort of cut off India, much like China has done from the rest of the internet. … I think that would be terrible for the kind of global open principles that the internet was based on,” Clegg said.
A car equipped with Momenta technology on display at the IAA Mobility show in Munich, Germany in September 2025.
Arjun Kharpal | CNBC
Momenta, a Chinese driverless technology startup, is raising a fresh round of funding that could value the company at around $6 billion, two people familiar with the matter told CNBC.
The valuation could change as the funding progresses, one of the people, who wished to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to discuss the details publicly, said.
Bloomberg first reported the deal with a valuation above $5 billion.
Momenta declined to comment when contacted by CNBC.
The Beijing-headquartered company develops software and algorithms that can be used by automakers to give their vehicles some automated driving features. These company claims that its Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) allows a car to carry out some functions autonomously such as changing lanes.
This week Momenta and Mercedes-Benz struck a deal to bring the Chinese firm’s technology to the German auto giant’s all-new electric CLA in China. The technology will power Mercedes-Benz’s driver assistance system across highways, urban streets, and parking, the two companies said in a joint press release on Thursday.
Momenta’s technology will eventually be equipped on 40 models developed by Mercedes-Benz, a person familiar with the matter said.
BMW signed a similar deal in June to equip its Neue Klasse electric vehicles in China with Momenta technology.
The company is participating in a competitive market that includes players like Nvidia and Horizon Robotics in China. There are a number of other players in the autonomous driving software space including WeRide and Pony.ai.
Signing with global automakers is a big win for Momenta which is also gearing up for an initial public offering. Reuters reported on Friday that the company is considering shifting its listing to Hong Kong from New York.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai waves as he arrives to attend the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris, France, February 11, 2025.
Benoit Tessier | Reuters
Google long touted the need for factually accurate information on its platforms, but a letter submitted to Congress this week demonstrates how the tech company is shifting to prioritize “free expression.”
The company’s YouTube division on Tuesday said it will soon allow accounts that were previously banned for spreading misinformation related to Covid-19 and the 2020 U.S. election to apply for reinstatement. The company made the announcement through the letter, which was penned by Alphabet lawyer Daniel Donovan and sent to House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio.
That announcement effectively rolled back a policy that had treated violations as lifetime bans.
Google’s new stance comes despite the company touting the need for accuracy and fact-checking as far back as 2016 and throughout the pandemic. During that time, the company has used third party fact-checkers and trust and safety teams monitoring misinformation.
Donovan’s letter is the latest backtrack from the company that once positioned itself as a bastion for accurate information but is increasingly touting “free expression.” Google isn’t alone. Meta similarly changed its speech policies in January, just before the second inauguration of President Donald Trump.
YouTube’s new reinstatement policy comes as Alphabet is under heavy regulatory pressure. The company lost back-to-back antitrust cases brought by the Department of Justice related to Google’s dominance in online search and advertising. Google is also in talks with Trump lawyers after a lawsuit stemmed from the suspension of the president’s social media accounts after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Trump filed suits against Facebook, the company formerly known as Twitter and YouTube later in 2021, and he settled with Meta and X earlier this year.
“Google is committed to free expression and works to connect users with a broad range of high quality, relevant information,” the company told CNBC in a statement, adding that it does not rely on external fact checkers for ranking content in products like Search or YouTube.
The company added that it is continue to invest in new technologies like SynthID, a watermarking tool that shows when content is AI-generated, and Community Notes, a feature that allows users to annotate content on YouTube with additional context.
Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump and Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) speak on Day 2 of the Republican National Convention (RNC), at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S., July 16, 2024.
Mike Segar | Reuters
The importance of ‘accurate information’
Google first ramped up its fact-checking operations ahead of the 2016 U.S. elections.
The company had faced growing concerns over misinformation, and false or misleading stories often ranked highly in Search or appearing in Google News.
Alphabet added a fact-checking category to Google News in October 2016. The “Fact Check” tag used the program ClaimReview to highlight articles from verified fact-checking organizations like PolitiFact and Snopes. With the new tag, Google said it wanted “to help readers find fact checking in major news stories.”
“We’re excited to see the growth of the Fact Check community and to shine a light on its efforts to divine fact from fiction, wisdom from spin,” Google said at the time.
In 2017, Google expanded its “Fact Check” tag globally and to its search results. It showed results from third-party fact-checking organizations that were verified by the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) or similar bodies. The fact-checked tags in search results showed information about the accuracy of a claim, who made the claim and who fact checked the claim.
“Even though differing conclusions may be presented, we think it’s still helpful for people to understand the degree of consensus around a particular claim and have clear information on which sources agree,” the company said at the time.
In 2018, YouTube’s then-CEO Susan Wojcicki said the video service would begin including text boxes with “information cues” on videos that promote conspiracy theories. The boxes would link to third-party sources that debunk the hoaxes in question, CNBC reported at the time.
At a U.S. Congressional testimony that December, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichaisaid that users “look to us to provide accurate, trusted information.”
Google’s fact-checking efforts took on greater importance following the Covid-19 outbreak. The company faced criticism for misinformation going viral on its properties, including videos on YouTube related to elections, Covid-19 and vaccines.
In an April 2020 blog, Google said more people were coming to YouTube for news, so it would be “expanding fact checks on YouTube to the United States.” To do this, YouTube said it would use the information panels introduced in 2018 to link users to information about Covid-19 from sources like the World Health Organization, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health authorities.
“The outbreak of COVID-19 and its spread around the world has reaffirmed how important it is for viewers to get accurate information during fast-moving events,” it said at the time.
In a May 2020 blog titled “CoronaVirus: How We’re Helping,” Pichai wrote that Google is protecting people from misinformation.
“Our Trust and Safety team has been working around the clock and across the globe to safeguard our users from phishing, conspiracy theories, malware and misinformation, and we are constantly on the lookout for new threats,” Pichai wrote. “On YouTube, we are working to quickly remove any content that claims to prevent the coronavirus in place of seeking medical treatment.”
Still, videos containing inaccurate information began to go viral faster than YouTube could manage by November 2020.
A video titled “Trump won” posted by right-leaning media organization One American News Network on YouTube showed OAN anchor Christina Bobb saying, “President Trump won four more years in the office last night.” The video also included unsubstantiated claims of “rampant voter fraud” against Republican ballots and urged viewers to “take action” against Democrats. The video had more than 300,000 views before YouTube stopped running ads alongside it.
YouTube does not “allow ads to run on content that undermines confidence in elections with demonstrably false information,” a spokesperson for the service said at the time.
Asked why the video was left up, another YouTube spokesperson said that the service’s “Community Guidelines” for taking videos down applied to videos that discouraged voting but not to videos that advocate for interference after votes have already been cast.
Later that month, YouTube suspended OAN’s account, saying it was “due to repeated violations of its Covid-19 misinformation policy and other channel monetization policies.”
Days after the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, the company suspended Trump’s YouTube account, saying that the outgoing president’s videos violated the service’s policies that prohibit content from inciting violence.
The importance of ‘free expression’
In 2023, Google began changing its tune.
That June, Google said that effective immediately it would stop removing false claims of widespread election fraud in the 2020 presidential race from YouTube.
YouTube said in a blog that it made the decision to balance its twin goals of “protecting our community and providing a home for open discussion and debate.” The decision, which came ahead of the 2024 mid-term U.S. elections, undid a policy implemented in December 2020 after President Joe Biden won the 2020 U.S. election.
“In the current environment, we find that while removing this content does curb some misinformation, it could also have the unintended effect of curtailing political speech without meaningfully reducing the risk of violence or other real-world harm,” the company wrote.
In March 2023, YouTube reinstated Trump’s YouTube channel, allowing him to upload videos once again.
A year later, Google and YouTube in March 2024 laid off employees from its trust and safety team as part of broader staff cuts across the company. Those cuts came as others in tech, including Meta, Amazon and the company then known as Twitter, also reduced the size of their respective trust and safety teams.
The velocity of YouTube’s changing speech policies accelerated in 2025.
Kent Walker, president and chief legal officer at Alphabet Inc., during an interview in New York, US, on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024.
Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Google Global Affairs President Kent Walker told a deputy director of the European Commission that it would “pull out of all fact-checking commitments” from its software code before letting its services become a code of conduct for the EU’s Digital Services Act, according to a January report by Axios.
The fact-checking integration required by the European Commission “simply isn’t appropriate or effective for our services,” Walker wrote in a letter to the deputy director, according to the report.
The company expanded on this notion in a blog for developers published in June, saying that it would phase out “support for a few structured data features in Search,” including the ClaimReview fact-checking snippets.
“Google did not inform fact-checkers that the 10-year collaboration was coming to an end, let alone consult with us on the decision to stop using the fact-checks that we provided for free,” wrote Clara Jiménez Cruz, CEO of fact-checking foundation Maldita.es and chair of the European Fact-Checking Standards Network.
Google told CNBC it never integrated fact checking at scale. The company added that the phase out of ClaimReview was done as part of an effort to simplify its Search results page.
In August, YouTube TV signed a multi-year deal with OAN, the same network it had suspended from YouTube after the 2020 U.S. election.
And with Tuesday’s letter, YouTube said it would allow accounts previously banned for spreading misinformation about Covid-19 and the 2020 U.S. election to apply for reinstatement. Among channels previously banned under those rules were some associated with Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino, former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
YouTube on Thursday posted on X saying that previously terminated creators had already begun attempting to create new channels. It clarified that the new policy is a “limited pilot program” that hasn’t formally opened yet.
“YouTube has not and will not empower fact-checkers to take action on or label content across the Company’s services,” Alphabet’s counsel wrote in its letter to Rep. Jordan.
In contrast to the letter, YouTube’s help page as of Thursday says the service will display information panels with links to independent fact checks under videos.
“If a channel is owned by a news publisher that is funded by a government, or publicly funded, an information panel providing publisher context may be displayed on the watch page of the videos on its channel,” the help page states.
Google said it will continue to use information panels on topics that warrant additional context, such as videos that discuss the moon landing. Google said the panels link to more information but never refute claims made within a particular video.
In the letter, Alphabet’s Donovan also wrote that senior Biden administration officials pressed the company to remove “non-violative user-generated content.” Donovan wrote that the Biden administration “sought to influence the actions of platforms based on their concerns regarding misinformation.”
“It is unacceptable and wrong when any government, including the Biden Administration, attempts to dictate how the Company moderates content,” Donovan wrote. Alphabet “has consistently fought against those efforts on First Amendment grounds.”
Donovan wrote that while YouTube’s reliance on health authorities during the pandemic was well intentioned, it “should never have come at the expense of public debate.”
In that five-page letter, Alphabet appeared to take a different tone than it had in the past. There were no mentions of accurate, factual or highly-reliable information, but the company made several mentions of protecting “free expression.”
“The Company has a commitment to freedom of expression,” Donovan wrote. “This commitment is unwavering and will not bend to political pressure.”
The House Judiciary Committee published its own press release alongside the Alphabet letter, writing “Google admits Censorship Under Biden.”