Venture capitalist and early Facebook investor Jim Breyer said Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been energized by his company’s recent push into AI.
Meanwhile, OpenAI is reportedly preparing to launch a Ph.D.-level super AI that can complete complex human tasks.
In an exclusive interview with WIRED, celebrated intellectual property lawyer Mark Lemley elaborates on why he quit and what he makes of the AI copyright battlefield.
Many experts predict that AI will not necessarily eliminate jobs but will instead shift human workers into more creative and strategic roles. Also read USB-C Chargers Now Mandatory Across the EU During a recent interview on Joe Rogan’s podcast,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg used YouTube and its battle to take down pirated content to defend his own company’s use of copyrighted data to train AI.
On Mark Zuckerberg's Instagram, a thinly-veiled AI fetish account called "Asian Amputees" has more than 100,000 followers — and under Meta's new content rules, that's A-OK. Using hashtags like #amputeegirl,
Newly unsealed documents show how Meta used LibGen, a pirated library of ebooks, to train its Llama 3 chatbot.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave Meta's Llama team approval to train on copyrighted documents, according to a new court filing.
Bloomberg reviewed the internal memo explaining the cuts, which was posted to Meta's internal Workplace forum Tuesday. In it, Zuckerberg confirmed that Meta was shifting its strategy to "move out low performers faster" so that Meta can hire new talent to fill those vacancies this year.
Meta is set to have layoffs starting off the year, and this is to expand more of their AI development as per its CEO.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the company will likely release an AI model that acts as a "midlevel engineer" this year.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has referenced to YouTube’s handling of piracy issues to defend company’s action in the high-profile AI copyright lawsuit, where the firm is accused of using pirated e-books to train AI models.