War weapons entrepreneur and Oculus founder Palmer Luckey is suing ... a lawsuit claims. Luckey purchased the mansion in 2017 for $3.8 million to house his "collection of automobiles and to ...
Palmer Luckey is keeping quiet about his 2016 firing from Facebook. Luckey, who built the virtual-reality company Oculus and sold it to Facebook, now Meta, for $2 billion in 2014, addressed his ...
Palmer Luckey was 20 years old when he founded the virtual reality company Oculus VR in 2012. Just two years later, he sold it to Meta for $2 billion in cash and stock. Since then he's founded ...
Palmer Luckey and Meta appear to be mending their frayed relationship. Luckey recently visited Meta for a demo and signaled he'd be open to working with Mark Zuckerberg. Luckey was fired in 2016 ...
Palmer Luckey is still angry about his ousting from Facebook eight years ago — but the billionaire virtual reality guru doesn't blame Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Luckey, 32, told the MIT ...
Palmer Luckey has, in some ways ... While various subcommittees within the Senate and House deliberate how many millions to spend on IVAS each year, what is not in question is the Pentagon ...
The story began in 2014 when Facebook acquired Luckey’s Oculus for a staggering $2.2 billion. However, the partnership soured in 2016 when Luckey became embroiled in political controversy over ...
Prominent figures in the tech industry, including Marc Andreessen and Palmer Luckey, have leveled accusations of deliberate censorship against Alphabet Inc.’s Google-owned YouTube.
Palmer Luckey told MIT Technology Review he's still "sore" about being ousted from Facebook in 2017. But the billionaire VR guru said he doesn't blame Mark Zuckerberg or the modern iteration of Meta.
The Oculus founder has pivoted from selling goggles to consumers, to selling them to the military This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like ...
Palmer Luckey told MIT Technology Review he's still "sore" about being ousted from Facebook in 2017. But the billionaire VR guru said he doesn't blame Mark Zuckerberg or the modern iteration of Meta.