Mark Zuckerberg said Wednesday it was too soon to say how advancements by DeepSeek, a Chinese startup, would impact Meta's heavy investments in AI.
Meta — and the rest of Big Tech — has been chasing face computers for years. Maybe 2025 will be the year it happens?
Midlevel staff are often the first targets of corporate downsizing efforts, but Meta’s plan to replace an entire tier of people with AI is a new wrinkle on an old story.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the company will stick to its plan to invest billions in AI despite the impact of DeepSeek.
Autonomous software engineering agents will take over significant programming tasks, predicts Meta's CEO. And he's counting on Llama to achieve that goal.
Recently, DeepSeek stated that its models match or surpass its main American rivals at a fraction of the cost, including Meta’s own Llama models, challenging the prevailing belief that scaling AI requires vast computing power and investment.
Meta Platforms' CEO Mark Zuckerberg provided more color on the company's artificial-intelligence plans and its hopes for the new Trump administration. “This is also going to be a big year for redefining our relationship with governments,
On Friday, Mark Zuckerberg announced a $60-65 billion investment into Meta AI.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said China-based DeepSeek has created a powerful artificial intelligence model, but it won’t likely curb Meta’s AI spending.
The cofounder and CEO of Meta doubled down on plans to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure as China's DeepSeek raises questions about the costs of the AI arm's race.
Meta reported record quarterly revenue and net profit for Q4 2024 as it looks to massively boost spending on AI in 2025.