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What is Big Tech Contributing to Help Fight COVID-19?

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Big Tech COVID19 Financial Efforts

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What is Big Tech Contributing to Fight COVID-19?

In the ongoing global crusade against COVID-19, everyone has a part to play. As the situation intensifies, the private sector has also been rallying to help governments and healthcare organizations cope with the situation, and U.S. tech companies are no exception.

With a combined market capitalization of over $4.7 trillion, the “FAAMG” Five—Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet (Google)—wield immense influence on the economy, as well as the potential to impact lives during this challenging time.

The Biggest Moves by Big Tech

In today’s data visualization, we look at the financial contributions being made by Big Tech giants in response to the pandemic. The main categories that these actions fall into are:

  • Small businesses: Grants and ad credits
  • Media/News: Fact-checking and grants for local news
  • Healthcare: COVID-19 research and frontline support
  • Relief Efforts: Public safety and non-profit donations

What is each company pledging in financial efforts to relieve the strain on those affected most by the ongoing crisis?

Alphabet (Google)

Many people rely on Google to find reliable news and resources during the pandemic. Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has focused its financial support towards small businesses and healthcare researchers, mainly through offering millions of dollars in advertising credits.

CategoryAmountDetails
Small Businesses$340MGoogle ad credits for small businesses
$200MInvestment fund for NGOs and financial institutions to help small businesses
$20MAd credits for NGOs and financial institutions to help small businesses
$15MCash grants to non-profits to help small businesses
Media/News$6.5MFunding offered to Google News Initiative to support media outlets and fact-checkers
Healthcare$250MAd grants for WHO and 100+ global government agencies
$20MGoogle Cloud credits for researchers and academic institutions
Relief Efforts$5MDonations matched for COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, co-created by the UN Foundation and the WHO
Total: $856.5M

Google has also promised to ramp up the production of 3 million masks for the CDC Foundation. In addition, Google has partnered with Apple to create a secure and private contact-tracing tool to aid public health authorities.

Facebook

Facebook is another massive platform through which information—and misinformation—spreads quickly and easily. Especially in times of crisis, the spread of poorly-vetted information can have a severe impact on our health and well-being.

To try and combat this, the company is allocating funds towards fact-checking, as well as supporting local media outlets.

CategoryAmountDetails
Small Businesses$100MSmall Business Grants Program, for up to 30,000 businesses in over 30 countries
Media/News$75MMarketing to help publishers worldwide with declining ad revenues
$25MFacebook Journalism Project towards emergency grant funding for local news
$2MGrants and donations to fact-checking organizations e.g. International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN)
$1MGrants for local news
Healthcare$25MSupport for front line healthcare workers
Relief Efforts$10MDonations matched to the CDC Foundation
$10MDonations matched for COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, co-created by the UN Foundation and the WHO
Total:$248M

Facebook and Alphabet will together match up to $15 million in donations to the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, which has raised over $127 million to date.

Amazon

During this unprecedented era of social distancing and lockdowns, the online retailer has become almost indispensable as ecommerce shoots up. Amazon has several initiatives on the go, including help to Seattle businesses and citizens, where its operations all started.

CategoryAmountDetails
Small Businesses$5.5MNeighborhood Small Business Relief Fund for over 400 Seattle small businesses
$1MCOVID-19 Response Fund, providing rapid-response grants to local businesses and vulnerable communities
Healthcare$20MAmazon Web Services (AWS) Diagnostic Development Initiative to speed up COVID-19 research
Relief Efforts$30M£24.5M (US$30M) provided to European non-profit and Red Cross organizations
$25MAmazon Relief Fund, dedicated to support independent delivery service partners and drivers
$10MAmazon Literary Partnership, an emergency initiative for artists and writers
$5MTotal donated in devices globally for healthcare workers and education efforts
$1MDonations matched to the non-profit Mary's Place
$1MTowards emergency response efforts in Washington, D.C.
Total:$72M

In addition, Amazon donated 800 laptops to public schools in the Seattle area, and has raised workers’ hourly and overtime pay. In early April, CEO Jeff Bezos also donated $100 million to Feeding America, a non-profit food bank.

Microsoft

Technology is playing an immense role in tracking COVID-19 and the progress we’re making to end it. As a result, Microsoft is directing its financial efforts towards its AI for Health program.

CategoryAmountDetails
Healthcare$20MAI for Health initiative commitment to focus on front-lines of research
China-specific Relief$6.5M¥46M (US$6.5M) donated in cash and tech support for China’s fight against the virus
Relief Efforts$1MCOVID-19 Response Fund, providing rapid-response grants to local businesses and vulnerable communities
Total:$27.5M

On top of these, Bill Gates officially stepped off the board of Microsoft in mid-March to focus on philanthropic efforts. The Gates Foundation has poured $100 million into funding for coronavirus research, and plans to pump billions more dollars into research in the coming weeks, to speed up vaccine development and manufacturing.

Apple

Finally, Apple is putting all its donations towards supporting public relief efforts, both in China and other affected parts of the world.

CategoryAmountDetails
Relief Efforts$15MDonations committed to global response efforts
China-specific Relief$7M¥50M (US$7M) donated to China’s long-term public health recovery efforts
Total:$22M

Further, Apple has donated 20 million masks to health workers, and aims to manufacture 1 million face shields per week.

Together, Microsoft and Apple contributed $2 million to the Seattle-based COVID-19 Response Fund, which has racked up $15.7 million in total donations to-date.

How the $1.25B Breaks Down

Looking at the information another way, how much money is flowing towards the various contribution categories?

Small businesses are the biggest beneficiaries of Big Tech’s economic relief, and understandably so—they are one of the most affected entities in the crisis. Healthcare research is also getting a boost, with funds focused on advancing potential treatments and vaccines in the pipeline, and supporting healthcare workers in the trenches of the pandemic.

CategoryCompany BreakdownTotal Amount
Small BusinessAlphabet: $575M
Facebook: $100M
Amazon: $6.5M
$681.5M
Media/ NewsFacebook: $103M
Alphabet: $6.5M
$109.5M
HealthcareAlphabet: $270M
Facebook: $25M
Microsoft: $20M
Amazon: $20M
$335M
Relief EffortsAmazon: $72M
Facebook: $20M
Apple: $15M
Alphabet: $5M
Microsoft: $1M
$113M
China-specific ReliefApple: $7M
Microsoft: $6.5M
$13.5M
Total:$1,252.5M

As a majority of work and socializing migrates online, Big Tech has the most to benefit from the current situation. Their positive efforts to lend a helping hand may well be a strategy for uplifting their poor reputation in the media—but is it enough?

Some might argue that for these Big Tech companies, $1.25 billion is just a drop in the bucket. In fact, other Silicon Valley players are single-handedly matching these contributions, such as Twitter’s CEO Jack Dorsey who pledged $1 billion of his own equity towards relief efforts and education.

However, that’s also not to imply that these financial efforts are the only actions taken by the five companies in question. Many of them are building critical educational and data-driven technological solutions to help mitigate the COVID-19 situation as it unfolds.

It also goes without saying that the applications they’ve created are helping us remain connected and supported—making life in lockdown a little bit easier.

All data as of Apr 12, 2020. Many thanks to our community who sent in requests for this content.

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Technology

Ranked: Semiconductor Companies by Industry Revenue Share

Nvidia is coming for Intel’s crown. Samsung is losing ground. AI is transforming the space. We break down revenue for semiconductor companies.

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A cropped pie chart showing the biggest semiconductor companies by the percentage share of the industry’s revenues in 2023.

Semiconductor Companies by Industry Revenue Share

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on Apple or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Did you know that some computer chips are now retailing for the price of a new BMW?

As computers invade nearly every sphere of life, so too have the chips that power them, raising the revenues of the businesses dedicated to designing them.

But how did various chipmakers measure against each other last year?

We rank the biggest semiconductor companies by their percentage share of the industry’s revenues in 2023, using data from Omdia research.

Which Chip Company Made the Most Money in 2023?

Market leader and industry-defining veteran Intel still holds the crown for the most revenue in the sector, crossing $50 billion in 2023, or 10% of the broader industry’s topline.

All is not well at Intel, however, with the company’s stock price down over 20% year-to-date after it revealed billion-dollar losses in its foundry business.

RankCompany2023 Revenue% of Industry Revenue
1Intel$51B9.4%
2NVIDIA$49B9.0%
3Samsung
Electronics
$44B8.1%
4Qualcomm$31B5.7%
5Broadcom$28B5.2%
6SK Hynix$24B4.4%
7AMD$22B4.1%
8Apple$19B3.4%
9Infineon Tech$17B3.2%
10STMicroelectronics$17B3.2%
11Texas Instruments$17B3.1%
12Micron Technology$16B2.9%
13MediaTek$14B2.6%
14NXP$13B2.4%
15Analog Devices$12B2.2%
16Renesas Electronics
Corporation
$11B1.9%
17Sony Semiconductor
Solutions Corporation
$10B1.9%
18Microchip Technology$8B1.5%
19Onsemi$8B1.4%
20KIOXIA Corporation$7B1.3%
N/AOthers$126B23.2%
N/ATotal $545B100%

Note: Figures are rounded. Totals and percentages may not sum to 100.


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Meanwhile, Nvidia is very close to overtaking Intel, after declaring $49 billion of topline revenue for 2023. This is more than double its 2022 revenue ($21 billion), increasing its share of industry revenues to 9%.

Nvidia’s meteoric rise has gotten a huge thumbs-up from investors. It became a trillion dollar stock last year, and broke the single-day gain record for market capitalization this year.

Other chipmakers haven’t been as successful. Out of the top 20 semiconductor companies by revenue, 12 did not match their 2022 revenues, including big names like Intel, Samsung, and AMD.

The Many Different Types of Chipmakers

All of these companies may belong to the same industry, but they don’t focus on the same niche.

According to Investopedia, there are four major types of chips, depending on their functionality: microprocessors, memory chips, standard chips, and complex systems on a chip.

Nvidia’s core business was once GPUs for computers (graphics processing units), but in recent years this has drastically shifted towards microprocessors for analytics and AI.

These specialized chips seem to be where the majority of growth is occurring within the sector. For example, companies that are largely in the memory segment—Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron Technology—saw peak revenues in the mid-2010s.


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