The growing use of AI contributed to Oracle laying off 21,000 workers in a year, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Monday. In its annual regulatory filing for the fiscal year ...
Oracle reduced its workforce by 13% over the past 12 months and cited AI deployment in an annual filing on Monday. The company currently employs 141,000 full-time workers, down from 162,000 the ...
Oracle is spending big on artificial intelligence—to the tune of $70 billion this year alone—in order to build data centers and AI-capable servers. But that AI expansion hasn’t come without a human ...
Oracle (ORCL) reduced its workforce by about 21,000 employees over the past year as part of a restructuring effort aimed at improving operational efficiency and integrating artificial intelligence ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. Oracle's head count has been shrinking as it made layoffs to cut costs — and now there's a number ...
ORCL sits 49% below its 52-week high at $175 while a $638 billion AI backlog, up 363% year over year, locks in years of forward revenue. Bears flag negative $24 billion in free cash flow and a planned ...
Back in March, it was widely reported that Oracle had sent anywhere between 10,000 and 30,000 employees an email, notifying them that it was their last day with the company. Now, we have a more ...
Oracle CTO and Executive Chairman Larry Ellison. Source: The Globe and Mail Oracle cut about 21,000 jobs in fiscal 2026 as it restructures around AI and cloud infrastructure, raising questions for ...
Cloud computing giant Oracle has laid off hundreds of Seattle workers since last year, part of sweeping cuts to the company’s workforce. Oracle says artificial intelligence is to blame. The Austin, ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. Microsoft was recently in talks with Oracle about leasing the company's cloud infrastructure, but the ...
Oracle's stock fell 19% this week, the steepest drop since August 2001, the depths of the dot-com bust. The company's capital expenditures surged 162% in the latest fiscal year, with almost $24 ...