OpenAI, Elon Musk and Zuckerberg
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Tech is emulating startups by embracing small teams packed with star staff. The big question is whether the strategy can transform giants like Meta.
Elon Musk’s rejected $97.4 billion bid to acquire OpenAI, with an unusual outreach to Mark Zuckerberg, highlights tensions between nonprofit ideals and profit-driven AI ambitions.
In a new post, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the company’s AI is on the slow road to superintelligence, a technological threshold beyond artificial general intelligence (AGI) when AI can begin improving itself.
The dramatic reorganization of Meta Superintelligence Labs comes amid a massive talent exodus and bitter internal tensions, according to a report.
Meta has reportedly struck a six-year, $10 billion deal with Google Cloud to power its AI ambitions, marking a rare partnership between fierce ad rivals as both companies race to scale generative AI.
(The Center Square) — U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Arizona, along with nine other senators, wrote a letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg this week inquiring about the company’s policies surrounding children's interactions with its AI chatbots.
Meta has restructured its AI group, splitting Meta Superintelligence Labs into four new teams. The move, driven by new AI chief Alexandr Wang, reflects both internal pressures and the need to compete with OpenAI and Google.
"The wellbeing of children should not be sacrificed in the race for AI development," the lawmakers fumed in their scathing letter to Zuckerberg.