Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan have donated $25 million through their foundation to a philanthropic effort organized by Bill Gates to explore new coronavirus treatments. 

The Gates Foundation donated $50 million last week to what it’s calling the “COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator.” The initiative brings together life sciences companies to collaborate on the development of new vaccines, diagnostics, and treatments for COVID-19.

“The Therapeutics Accelerator will enable researchers to quickly determine whether or not existing drugs have a potential benefit against COVID-19,” Chan and Zuckerberg said in a press release. “We hope these coordinated efforts will help stop the spread of COVID-19 as well as provide shared, reusable strategies to respond to future pandemics.”

The two donations are the largest from tech billionaires since the coronavirus outbreak. Wellcome and Mastercard are supporting the effort as well. 

The goal of the initiative is to either develop a new drug or adapt an existing treatment that it could help distribute alongside partnering pharmaceutical companies. 

The 15 companies participating in the project kicked off the effort by sharing their proprietary libraries of molecular compounds that have some history of being tested with COVID-19. 

The lineup includes big names in biotech such as Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Pfizer, Sanofi, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. 

Share:
More In Technology
Amazon Will Be First Trillion Dollar Stock, Says Forrester Analyst
Shares of the e-commerce giant soared hours after the company trounced estimates for earnings. Its fast-growing cloud business saw revenues rise nearly 50 percent to $6.1 billion. Forrester Research's Sucharita Kodali told Cheddar the company may beat Apple to the vaunted $1 trillion market cap mark.
Cybersecurity Company Tenable Soars in Public Debut
Shares of Tenable opened on the Nasdaq at $33 a share, well above the IPO price of $23. CEO Amit Yoran told Cheddar that cyberhacking is an "existential threat to so many organizations," and he wants to protect governments, the public sector, retailers, and cloud-computing companies from these dangers.
How 'Searching' Director Learned to Make Movies at Google
Aneesh Chaganty is the writer-director of "Searching," an experimental film shot entirely from the point of view of smartphones and computer screens. A former video maker at Google, Chaganty explains to Cheddar that his experience at the company prepared him for his film's technical complications.
Facebook Not Irreparably Damaged by Stock Dive, Says Analyst
Shares of Facebook plunged Thursday after its latest earnings report. But Jefferies analyst Brent Thill tells Cheddar the company won't suffer in the long term, particularly because Europe's new data rules are "great hygiene" to work out the kinks.
Is 'Shadow Banning' on Twitter a Thing?
President Trump accused Twitter of so-called "shadow banning" high-profile Republicans from the platform. Twitter has said that, while some users appear to not be showing up in auto-fill search results, down-ranking the results has been based solely on user behavior, not on their political leaning.
Spotify Shares Hit All-Time High After Earnings
Revenue growth at the music streaming service took a bit of a hit from new data regulations in Europe, but subscriber growth continued as the company hit 83 million paying users in the second quarter.
Load More