Meta’s ‘Superintelligence’ Isn’t Here yet. But Its AI Bets Are Already Paying Off - Egypt Independent
5 Articles
5 Articles
24-year-old Matt Deitke was working at a startup, but Mark Zuckerberg made up his mind to hire him for Facebook's parent company.
Meta’s ‘superintelligence’ isn’t here yet. But its AI bets are already paying off - Egypt Independent
If Meta investors had concerns about the company’s huge spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure and talent — and its ambitious “superintelligence” goal — they’re likely to be assuaged by its blockbuster earnings report on Wednesday. The results, as one analyst put it, indicates that “AI is becoming a real revenue driver, not just hype.”
Meta shifts AI strategy toward “personal superintelligence” and user engagement
Zuckerberg says “superintelligence is in sight” as Meta pours billions into AI. Company moves its AI focus away from competing with ChatGPT in productivity. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has outlined what he calls “personal superintelligence,” marking a shift in the company’s AI strategy. Technology journalist Alex Heath from The Verge, who has interviewed Zuckerberg several times, believes the plan signals that Meta is stepping back from trying to d…
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's Meta has secured the services of a 24-year-old artificial intelligence expert for $250 million, raising the bar again in the race for top tech talent. Matt Deitke, the founder of the successful AI startup, rejected Zuckerberg's original offer of about $125 million, considering it undervalued, The New York Times (NYT) reports.
AI Talent Boom: Meta’s $250M Deal for 24-Year-Old Researcher
In the high-stakes world of artificial intelligence, compensation packages are shattering records, eclipsing even the pay scales of history’s most ambitious scientific endeavors. A recent report highlights how a 24-year-old AI researcher at Meta is set to earn $250 million over four years—a figure that dwarfs the inflation-adjusted salaries of luminaries like J. Robert Oppenheimer during the Manhattan Project. According to Ars Technica, this pac…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium