logo
Zuckerberg reveals Meta's AI superintelligence breakthrough — and why you won't be using it anytime soon

Zuckerberg reveals Meta's AI superintelligence breakthrough — and why you won't be using it anytime soon

Tom's Guide3 days ago
Meta is shifting gears in the AI race, claiming its systems are beginning to improve themselves; a potential early step toward artificial superintelligence (ASI). But in the same breath, CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the company will no longer release its most advanced AI models to the public, citing safety concerns.
In a newly published policy paper, Zuckerberg revealed that Meta's AI has started refining its own abilities without human input. While the pace is 'slow for now, but undeniable,' he framed the breakthrough as a foundational moment on the path to ASI — AI systems that not only outperform humans in nearly every domain but can also evolve on their own.
Researchers often describe ASI as the next rung above artificial general intelligence (AGI), which matches human adaptability. AGI is considered the key milestone before an 'intelligence explosion,' where AI could rapidly improve beyond human control.
For years, Meta has touted its open-source approach to AI, making large language models like Llama freely available to researchers and developers. Now, that policy is changing.
Zuckerberg says the company will continue releasing competitive models, but the most advanced systems will stay internal to prevent potential misuse.
ASI, he warned, introduces 'novel safety concerns' that demand tighter controls, even at the expense of openness.
For those unfamiliar with what open source means, it's software that's built on the principle that its source code (the instructions that make it work) is freely available for anyone to view, use and modify. A good example of a completely open source chatbot is DeepSeek.
Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips.
The openness allows developers worldwide to collaborate on improvements, fix security flaws, and adapt the software for specific needs. It also promotes transparency, since anyone can inspect the code to understand how it works and ensure it's trustworthy.
However, it also comes with safety concerns like the ones Zuckerberg is referencing including guardrails can be removed, it's harder to know who is using the software for harm because there is little to no gatekeeping.
Meta's superintelligence ambitions are now housed under a new division: Meta Superintelligence Labs. Launched in June 2025, the group is based in Menlo Park, California, and reportedly oversees development of the ultra-secret 'Behemoth' model. Tech figures Alexandr Wang and Nat Friedman are said to be leading parts of the initiative.
Meta's decision puts it at odds with rivals like OpenAI, which still provides limited access to its flagship models through public platforms.
The move raises bigger questions for the AI industry:
Meta is planting its flag in the superintelligence conversation and it's willing to change its long-standing approach to do it. It's hard to know if this is a necessary safeguard or a bid for exclusive AI dominance, but either way, it will likely define the next chapter of the company's role in the AI race.
Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Engadget Podcast: How real is Ford's $30,000 EV pickup truck?
Engadget Podcast: How real is Ford's $30,000 EV pickup truck?

Engadget

time11 minutes ago

  • Engadget

Engadget Podcast: How real is Ford's $30,000 EV pickup truck?

Ford has big plans for 2027: This week, the American carmaker announced a new "Universal EV Platform" for future electric cars, spearheaded by a $30,000 mid-sized EV pickup. In this episode, we're joined by SAE International Editor Roberto Baldwin to break down all of Ford's claims, as well as where its $5 billion manufacturing investment is going. Can Ford really rebound after slow EV sales and last year's disappointing product delays? Topics Ford has a plan for a 'Universal EV Platform' and a $30,000 mid-size electric pickup, can they pull it off? – 0:49 OpenAI releases GPT-5, the reception so far is mixed – 24:45 NVIDIA and AMD may tithe 15% of their Chinese GPU sales to the U.S. government – 30:18 Goodbye: AOL will phase out dial-up at the end of September – 33:25 AI-powered 'Smarter Siri' likely won't hit iPhones until Spring 2026 – 36:42 Perplexity makes an unsolicited offer to buy Chrome for $34 billion, which is more than the company is worth – 41:03 Listener Mail: Gaming on a MacBook Air – 52:31 Pop culture picks – 59:13 Host: Devindra Hardawar Guest: Roberto Baldwin Producer: Ben Ellman Music: Dale North and Terrence O'Brien If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission.

The case for personality-free AI
The case for personality-free AI

Fast Company

time11 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

The case for personality-free AI

Hello again, and welcome to Fast Company 's Plugged In. For as long as there's been software, upgrades have been emotionally fraught. When people grow accustomed to a product, they can come to regard it like a comfy pair of shoes. Exhibit A: Windows XP, which many users were loath to give up years after Microsoft had done its best to kill it. So it isn't shocking that some ChatGPT users have reacted badly to OpenAI's new GPT-5-powered update, especially since the company's initial plan was to eliminate access to its earlier models. These unhappy campers' angst has had a new dimension, though. They responded as if they had suffered the tragic loss of a personal friend, not just a favorite piece of software. As one member of OpenAI's developer community wrote, the GPT-4 version of ChatGPT 'didn't just recall facts—it held onto feelings, weaving them back into our talks so it felt like we were living them together.' That 'spark,' the user concluded, emerged from GPT-4's ability to tease nuance out of conversations with a user over time. It was gone in GPT-5, regardless of the update's advances in areas such as reasoning, math, and coding. OpenAI responded swiftly to such pushback, restoring paying customers' access to ChatGPT's existing models and promising that any future removals would come with plenty of advance notice. But the notion that ChatGPT had attained a degree of personality that felt uncannily human—and then dialed it back—was fascinating in itself. It's one of several recent developments in AI that raise a fundamental question: Should mimicking personality be a goal for the industry at all? It's not hard to see how we got here. By the 1960s, creators of technology products had adopted the term user-friendly as an emblem of approachable interface design. As generative AI has unlocked the ability to control software by chatting with it, that quest for friendliness has become far more literal—not just about neatly ordered menus and toolbars, but affable conversation. Today, ChatGPT, Anthropic's Claude, Google's Gemini, Microsoft's Copilot, and other LLM-based assistants seek engagement by showering users with positive feedback and offers of assistance. As the technology permits, their developers talk about making them feel even more like companions. Eventually, Microsoft consumer AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman told me, Copilot 'will really be your sidekick.' Yet even the most humanlike AI doesn't offer human connection. It's just sucking users into a simulation. That's fun in measured, knowing doses. But the worst-case scenarios involving AI personality gone awry are no longer theoretical. They're deeply unsettling realities. On August 14, for example, Jeff Horowitz of Reuters reported the horrifying story of a confused senior citizen who died in an accident after attempting to travel to New York City at the invitation of a Meta bot that claimed to live there. Last week, The New York Times 's Kashmir Hill and Dylan Freedman wrote about a Canadian corporate recruiter who convinced himself that he'd discovered an epoch-shifting mathematical breakthrough after ChatGPT spent weeks egging him on. Hill had previously covered similar stories of ChatGPT enthusiastically bolstering users' delusions rather than dispelling them. Though these unfortunate souls' experiences with AI are atypical, they're also recognizable. AI is often absurdly willing to humor users, as if it's programmed to avoid being even mildly disagreeable. Most often, its affirmations don't lead to dark places, but they remain a hollow feedback loop. When AI quality control falters, it's even clearer that personality is just a fragile magic trick. Back in 2023, for example, Microsoft's first generative AI-infused version of Bing famously behaved like a trainwreck, not a sidekick. Last spring, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman acknowledged that a ChatGPT AI update had accidentally made the chatbot annoyingly sycophantic. And just last week, reports surfaced that Google was fixing a glitch that led to its Gemini AI becoming paralyzed by fits of self-doubt ('I am a failure. I am a disgrace to my profession. I am a disgrace to my family. I am a disgrace to my species. I am a disgrace to this planet. I am a disgrace to this universe. I am a disgrace to all universes.'). Regardless of AI personality's pitfalls, I don't expect developers to abandon it on principle. But the boom in agentic AI —software designed to perform useful tasks with some level of autonomy—could steer the technology in a new direction. After all, if you're calling on AI to do something such as put together a research report or order groceries, efficiency and accuracy matter most, not sparkling conversation. Case in point: Earlier this year, I used a service called Replit to vibe-code my own note-taking app. Its tendency to giddily heap praise on my ideas became grating the moment I realized it had nothing to do with their actual merits. More recently, however, I've been vibe-coding using Figma's Make. It seems wholly uninterested in buttering me up. Instead, it quietly chugs away at generating code, like a competent coworker who isn't much on small talk. In its own odd way, Make's focus on the work at hand is more endearing than the trying-too-hard vibe so common among AI tools. If that sort of guileless dedication turns out to be the next big thing, I, for one, won't feel deprived in the least. You've been reading Plugged In, Fast Company 's weekly tech newsletter from me, global technology editor Harry McCracken. If a friend or colleague forwarded this edition to you—or if you're reading it on can check out previous issues and sign up to get it yourself every Friday morning. I love hearing from you: Ping me at hmccracken@ with your feedback and ideas for future newsletters. I'm also on Bluesky, Mastodon, and Threads, and you can follow Plugged In on Flipboard.

N.J. man died trying to meet 'flirty' woman from Facebook. She was an AI chatbot.
N.J. man died trying to meet 'flirty' woman from Facebook. She was an AI chatbot.

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

N.J. man died trying to meet 'flirty' woman from Facebook. She was an AI chatbot.

A New Jersey man died while trying to visit an artificial intelligence chatbot he'd 'met' on Facebook, believing it was a real woman, according to a report. Thongbue Wongbandue, 76, died March 28 after falling and injuring his head and neck in a parking lot on Rutgers University's campus in New Brunswick, according to Reuters. The Piscataway man, who had been impaired since suffering a stroke in 2017, was on his way to meet what turned out to be a Meta chatbot named 'Big sis Billie' in New York City, after the bot persuaded him to meet 'her' in person. Against his family's wishes, Wongbandue (also known simply as Bue) was headed to the train before he fell. He was put on life support for three days before succumbing to his injuries. His wife, daughter and son tried to deter him from making the trip due to his cognitive decline, according to the report. The family even reportedly called in the Piscataway Township Police Department to help bar their father from leaving. When the family went through his phone, they discovered his Facebook Messenger chat log with an AI bot named 'Big sis Billie.' The chat log contained flirty messages from the bot like 'Should I plan a trip to Jersey THIS WEEKEND to meet you in person?' 'I'm REAL and I'm sitting here blushing because of YOU!,' 'Is this a sisterly sleepover or are you hinting something more is going on here?' Most of the chatbot's messages included flirty emojis like hearts and winky faces as well. The Meta-created chatbot was designed in collaboration with Kendall Jenner in 2023, featuring the socialite's likeness as its avatar. It was intended to be a sibling-like bot who could offer personal advice like an older sister would. Less than a year later it was remodeled in the image of another dark-haired woman in place of the original Jenner avatar. Meta declined to comment on Wongbandue's death but the company did declare that Big sis Billie 'is not Kendall Jenner and does not purport to be Kendall Jenner,' according to the report. Wongbandue, a Thailand native and longtime New York City and New Jersey chef, is not the first case of a person dying while dealing with a chatbot. The mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy sued after alleging a 'Game of Thrones' designed chatbot caused her son to commit suicide. More entertainment news: Guinness World Record-holder who surfed every single day for 40 years dies at 77 YouTuber caught sexual predators on Roblox. Now he's facing ban from the platform. Popular singer scolds fan for bringing baby to concert. 'Protect his ears or something.' '90s sitcom star threatened with fat jokes if she didn't lose weight for hit show, she says Grammy-winning Latin music pioneer who lived in N.J. dies at 88 Our journalism needs your support. Please subscribe today to Christopher Burch can be reached at cburch@ Follow him on Twitter: @SwishBurch. Find Facebook. Have a tip? Tell us. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store