Chris Ciaccia

Chris Ciaccia is a reporter covering technology and science for Fox News. He has a keen interest in space exploration and has written extensively on the subject. His articles are generally well-researched and unbiased, with a clear and concise writing style that makes complex scientific topics accessible to a general audience.

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The Daily's Verdict

This author is known for its high journalistic standards. The author strives to maintain neutrality and transparency in its reporting, and avoids conflicts of interest. The author has a reputation for accuracy and rarely gets contradicted on major discrepancies in its reporting.

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Conflicts of Interest

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Contradictions

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Deceptions

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Recent Articles

New Echo Spot: Amazon's Upgraded Alarm Clock with Improved Visuals and Audio for $44.99

New Echo Spot: Amazon's Upgraded Alarm Clock with Improved Visuals and Audio for $44.99

Broke On: Monday, 08 July 2024 Amazon's new Echo Spot alarm clock, now available for Prime members at $44.99, boasts improved visuals and audio quality with a front-facing speaker and customizable clock faces. The latest iteration lacks a camera but connects to smart home devices and Alexa Routines.
Salesforce Reports First Single-Digit Sales Growth in Two Decades: A $9.13 Billion Miss and Stock Price Drop

Salesforce Reports First Single-Digit Sales Growth in Two Decades: A $9.13 Billion Miss and Stock Price Drop

Broke On: Wednesday, 29 May 2024 Salesforce, a San Francisco-based software company, reported disappointing first-quarter sales and revenue of $9.13 billion, missing analyst estimates and causing a significant stock price drop. Despite growth in some business units like Data Cloud, Mulesoft, and Tableau (24% to $1.4 billion), overall earnings per share were $2.44 – below expectations. CEO Marc Benioff expressed confidence in Salesforce's AI capabilities but failed to reassure investors amidst industry-wide tech challenges and competition concerns.
Tech Giants Alphabet and Meta Discuss Licensing Hollywood Content for AI-Generated Videos: Report

Tech Giants Alphabet and Meta Discuss Licensing Hollywood Content for AI-Generated Videos: Report

Broke On: Wednesday, 22 May 2024 Tech giants Alphabet and Meta are reportedly in talks with Hollywood studios to license content for their AI video generation software, offering tens of millions of dollars for partnerships. Google's subsidiary Google is developing text-to-video technology, while Meta explores deals with media publishers to use their content for training AI models. Netflix, Disney, and Warner Brothers Discussions are at an early stage and could involve product and legal teams. The potential deals come as Meta invests heavily in generative AI work.
Biden Administration Revokes Export Licenses for Qualcomm and Intel to Supply Huawei, Potentially Crippling Their Chip Production

Biden Administration Revokes Export Licenses for Qualcomm and Intel to Supply Huawei, Potentially Crippling Their Chip Production

Broke On: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 The Biden administration has revoked export licenses for Qualcomm and Intel to supply Huawei with processors, potentially crippling the Chinese tech giant's ability to produce advanced chips. This decision comes amidst increasing pressure from Republican lawmakers over cyber espionage allegations and further strains U.S.-China relations.
Microsoft's New In-House AI Model MAI-1: A Larger, More Expensive Competitor to Google, Anthropic and OpenAI Overseen by Mustafa Suleyman

Microsoft's New In-House AI Model MAI-1: A Larger, More Expensive Competitor to Google, Anthropic and OpenAI Overseen by Mustafa Suleyman

Broke On: Monday, 06 May 2024 Microsoft, under the leadership of ex-Google AI head Mustafa Suleyman, is developing a new in-house AI model named MAI-1 with 500 billion parameters, making it larger and more expensive than previous models. The company paid $650 million for Inflection's intellectual property to accelerate the project.

NASA's Juno Spacecraft Captures 'Face' on Jupiter and Io's Volcanic Activity

Broke On: Sunday, 31 October 2021 NASA's Juno spacecraft captured an image of a 'face' on Jupiter during a close flyby on October 27, 2021. The 'face' was spotted by citizen scientist Kevin M. Gill, who processed the image using data from Juno's JunoCam imager. The image also shows Jupiter's moon Io, the most volcanically active body in our solar system, with 266 active volcanic hotspots linked by a global magma ocean.