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Silver Lake’s Lucas Goes Back to School For Lessons in AI
Silver Lake’s Lucas Goes Back to School For Lessons in AI Christian Lucas, one of the top executives at specialist technology investor Silver Lake, is back in the classroom as he and his firm seek an edge in age of artificial intelligence. The managing partner said during a panel discussion at the SuperReturn conference in Berlin that Silver Lake has an in-house team of educators on hand to bring its dealmakers up to speed on the rapidly-developing technology.
144 - Silver Lake Technology Investors IV, L.P. (0001672565) (Reporting)
Filed: 2026-06-02 AccNo: 0001193125-26-254192 Size: 42 KB
4 - Silver Lake Technology Associates V, L.P. (0001737657) (Reporting)
Filed: 2026-06-08 AccNo: 0001193125-26-262726 Size: 40 KB
4 - Silver Lake Technology Associates V, L.P. (0001737657) (Reporting)
Filed: 2026-06-08 AccNo: 0001193125-26-262725 Size: 67 KB
144 - Silver Lake Technology Investors V, L.P. (0001735863) (Reporting)
Filed: 2026-06-02 AccNo: 0001193125-26-254197 Size: 41 KB
‘It’s Not a Joke’: A ‘Simpsons’ Writer Holds His First Presidential Campaign Rally
On a sunny Friday afternoon in a park overlooking the Silver Lake Reservoir in Los Angeles, about 30 people—including three in costume as Uncle Sam, Darth Vader, and Elsa from Frozen—gathered to hear the first official stump speech of Dan Greaney, candidate for the 2028 US presidential election. “My fellow Americans,” Greaney began, standing at a lectern in front of a row of American flags flapping in a light breeze. After this opening, he added, “Yeah, let’s go with that.
49ers investor Vinod Khosla eyes blockbuster bid for Seahawks
Vinod Khosla is the co-founder of Sun Microsystems and the founder of Khosla Ventures in Menlo Park, California. As of June 1, 2026, Vinod Khosla’s real-time net worth is $15.4 billion, according to Forbes. Khosla, along with his son, Neal Khosla, became an investor in the San Francisco 49ers only last year.
Silicon Valley’s new buyout playbook is hitting Wall Street
Venture capital is buying its way into the artificial intelligence transformation that enterprise software hasn't delivered. Instead of selling AI tools to companies, venture firms are buying legacy companies outright and rebuilding them around AI from the inside. The bet puts VCs on offense and leaves traditional private equity, which spent the last cycle buying enterprise software at peak prices, on defense.
Family offices bet on sports, from pickleball leagues to smart soccer balls
A version of this article first appeared in CNBC's Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. Last month, investment firms of the ultra wealthy went all-in on sports and played on multiple fronts.