Nithin Kamath, CEO of Zerodha, has raised concerns about fake apps mimicking financial institutions, urging RBI for stricter countermeasures. He praised RBI's new '.bank.in' domain but called for ...
Zerodha co-founder Nithin Kamath has cast doubt on the authenticity of app reviews on Google Play Store and Apple App Store. The entrepreneur added that most of the 5-star reviews on these app ...
Prime Minister Modi met tech billionaire Elon Musk and his family in Washington, bringing thoughtful gifts for Musk's children. Modi presented three classic Indian literature books: The Great RK ...
The funding will be used to fuel the brand’s in-house manufacturing expansion, talent acquisition, and category growth ...
Reliance Industries (RIL) has retained its position as India's most valuable company for the fourth consecutive year, as per ...
Table of Contents Hardwire your PC Check Steam's download speed options and clear the cache Check your region If you're on Wi-Fi, no matter what you will get slower download speeds. It doesn't ...
Nithin Kamath, the founder and CEO of online broking platform Zerodha, recently backed Zerodor, a waterless urinal which featured in an episode of Shark Tank India season 3. In a post on X ...
Bryan Johnson, the 47-year-old millionaire tech entrepreneur, made headlines when he abruptly left a podcast recording with Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath. The incident occurred during a session ...
Chinese startup DeepSeek’s eponymous AI assistant rocketed to the top of Apple Inc.’s iPhone download charts, stirring doubts in Silicon Valley about the strength of America’s lead in AI.
South Korea's data protection authority on Monday said new downloads of the Chinese AI app DeepSeek had been suspended in the country after DeepSeek acknowledged failing to take into account some ...
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — DeepSeek, a Chinese artificial intelligence startup, has temporarily paused downloads of its chatbot apps in South Korea while it works with local authorities to ...
South Korea has suspended new downloads of Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek. A government official explained that the decision was made due to concerns over data privacy.