Meta's "single largest investment" is now AI, not the metaverse

In a stark contrast to its promise to deliver on the metaverse that led it to change its name at the end of 2021, Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta has announced an unsurprising shift in direction.

In a letter to employees, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that the company’s “single largest investment” is now in advancing its AI strategy.

At the same time, Zuckerberg informed workers that a further 10,000 roles would be cut, and the company’s current 5,000 vacancies won't be filled.

Meta artificial intelligence

While work on its metaverse “remains central to defining the future of social connection”, according to the company, the move could be seen as Meta jumping on the recent AI bandwagon to claw back sizable losses to Zuckerberg's own personal wealth which, as Entrepreneur notes, is "hitched to Meta's performance".

Given Meta’s existing place in its industry, Zuckerberg shared that the company already has the infrastructure to deliver AI at what he called an “unprecedented scale”.

Meta’s plan for artificial intelligence remains unclear. However the letter alluded to creative expression and new content discovery as some of the existing use cases.

In his letter, Zuckerberg clearly distinguishes AI and the metaverse, which he says is designed to “deliver a realistic sense of presence”.

While artificial intelligence will undoubtedly find itself heavily integrated into the metaverse, the company’s sudden change of direction and heavy investment in AI begs the question of whether it’s seeking a short-term fix to the economic challenges that it's very clearly facing.

Meanwhile, AI writers like ChatGPT and other media-generating tools have seen a huge surge in interest from consumers and businesses alike, and this could be the perfect time (albeit a touch late) for Meta to join the party.

Looking ahead in what it calls its “Year of Efficiency”, Meta will be removing some tiers of management in an effort to streamline its workforce, optimizing its engineer-to-other-role ratio, and even putting a stop to lower priority projects. 



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