Billionaire Jack Dorsey foresees a future where bitcoin could supplant the U.S. dollar as the dominant global currency. He envisions a scenario where bitcoin’s value could soar to $1 million by 2030. Highlighting the cryptocurrency’s…
Over the weekend, a prominent personality in the bitcoin and blockchain sector, Bruce Fenton, addressed Jack Dorsey, CEO of Block, Inc., through a post on the social media platform X. Fenton asserts that Dorsey owes an explanation, as…
The number of deep fakes flooding the internet is alarmingly high. It's getting hard to tell what's really from the AI-generated fakes. Co-founder and former X (Twitter) CEO Jack Patrick Dorsey recently shared similar sentiments.
Jack Dorsey, co-founder of Twitter and CEO of Block Inc., warned that the proliferation of deepfakes will make distinguishing between reality and fabrication increasingly difficult, creating a simulation-like experience in the future.
Jack Dorsey, the co-founder of Twitter, now known as X, has reportedly inadvertently funded a developer with ties to a Brazilian fascist through his $10 million donation to the decentralized social-media protocol Nostr.
Block (CRYPTO: SQ) co-founder Jack Dorsey voiced his concern about the power of algorithms to influence free will, suggesting that a marketplace of algorithms may help ameliorate the problem.
Ocean, a Bitcoin mining pool backed by Jack Dorsey, announced the launch of an international hub in El Salvador through a new entity. Ocean Mining S.A. de C.V., headquartered in San Salvador, will “continue the advancement of…
Jack Dorsey, the co-founder and former CEO of Twitter, has expressed that the platform is no longer the "closest form of global consciousness." He believes that AI has now taken over that role.
Jack Dorsey’s TBD, which is part of Block, has expanded into Africa after a partrnership with pan-African cross border payments firm Chipper Cash. Chipper Cash has been integrated into the tbDEX protocol to power cross border payments and…
Jack Dorsey, the founder and former CEO of Twitter (now X), admitted that Twitter’s relationship with the government was (and potentially still is) “problematic.”