Mark Zuckerberg shares a confusing vision for AI 'superintelligence'
In the memo, which reads more like a manifesto than a strategic business plan, Zuckerberg explains that he's "extremely optimistic that superintelligence will help humanity accelerate our pace of progress." The technology, according to him, "has the potential to begin a new era of personal empowerment where people will have greater agency to improve the world in the directions they choose."
Zuckerberg, who has previously expressed a desire to build artificial general intelligence , never defines "superintelligence." Nor does the 616-word memo explain how Meta plans to create such a technology, what it might help people accomplish or why anyone should trust the company to build it. Instead, he implies that Meta will be a better steward of this non-specifically powerful AI than "others in the industry" who expect "humanity will live on a dole of its output."
As profound as the abundance produced by AI may one day be, an even more meaningful impact on our lives will likely come from everyone having a personal superintelligence that helps you achieve your goals, create what you want to see in the world, experience any adventure, be a better friend to those you care about, and grow to become the person you aspire to be.
Meta's vision is to bring personal superintelligence to everyone. We believe in putting this power in people's hands to direct it towards what they value in their own lives.
This is distinct from others in the industry who believe superintelligence should be directed centrally towards automating all valuable work, and then humanity will live on a dole of its output. At Meta, we believe that people pursuing their individual aspirations is how we have always made progress expanding prosperity, science, health, and culture. This will be increasingly important in the future as well.
Left unsaid by Zuckerberg, is the fact that the memo comes at a time when he's been rapidly reorganizing Meta's AI teams. Last month, the company invested $14.8 billion into Scale AI, a move that allowed it to bring Scale CEO and founder Alexandr Wang into the company. The 28-year-old founder is now Meta's Chief AI Officer in charge of its superintelligence efforts.
Meta has also been on a hiring spree for the effort, and has reportedly been offering prominent researchers eight- and nine-figure pay packages to come to Meta. In recent weeks, the company has successfully recruited high-profile talent from Apple and OpenAI , including Shengjia Zhao, who helped created GPT-4. Zhao announced last week that he will take on the role of "chief scientist of Meta superintelligence labs." Just yesterday, Wired reported that Meta has recently turned its recruiting efforts to Thinking Machines Lab, an AI startup founded by former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, and that in at least one case it made an offer worth more than $1 billion over several years. (Meta PR said some details of that report were "off.") All that is on top of the $72 billion Zuckerberg has said Meta plans to spend on AI infrastructure.
Driving all this is that Zuckerberg has reportedly grown increasingly frustrated by Meta's own generative AI efforts. The company has had to delay its larger "Behemoth" Llama 4 model by months. Llama's struggles have also reportedly caused Zuckerberg to question whether Meta's AI efforts should remain open source, according to CNBC .
It's also likely no coincidence Zuckerberg's rambling manifesto comes hours before the company is scheduled to report earnings and tell analysts more about its plans to spend billions of dollars on new AI efforts.
Meta's CEO also clearly sees AI dominance as an opportunity to end the company's reliance on mobile platforms, especially Apple, which he believes have been able to exert too much control via their app stores. In his memo, he explains that "personal devices like glasses … will become our primary computing devices." A future where smart glasses are more important than smartphones would, of course, be extremely convenient for Meta, which has spent the last several years building smart glasses.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Meta Outlines Performance Improvements Based on its Evolving AI Systems
This story was originally published on Social Media Today. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Social Media Today newsletter. Meta's going all-in on AI, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg now driven to reach his new goal of automated 'superintelligence,' which could see Meta eventually crack the code on enabling truly transcendent machine learning systems. But it's not only in large-scale applications that Meta's seeing gains from AI, with the company also applying its AI models to more elements of its apps, and powering improved algorithmic matching to keep people using Facebook, Instagram and Threads for longer. Indeed, within its Q2 performance report, Meta noted that AI recommendations have continued to boost video engagement across its apps. As per Meta: 'In Q2, Instagram video time was up more than 20% year-over-year globally. We're seeing strong traction on Facebook as well, particularly in the U.S. where video time spent similarly expanded more than 20% year-over-year.' In broader terms, Meta also notes that its AI recommendations have led to a 5% increase in time spent on Facebook, and a 6% on Instagram this year. But video remains the key focus for IG and Facebook engagement, with Meta also reporting back in April that Reels clips now make up 50% of all time spent on IG. If you're looking to maximize your Facebook and/or Instagram engagement, video content needs to be a consideration, with its AI recommendation systems now pushing more relevant video to more users. This shift is also notable because earlier in the year, as part of Meta's defense against an FTC antitrust case, the company admitted that Facebook's and Instagram's share of time spent among social media apps had declined significantly, with most personal interaction shifting to messaging platforms instead. The latter part here is nothing new, as we've covered the broader shift to messaging pretty extensively. But it is interesting to note that AI, and AI-recommended video content specifically, is now helping Meta to right the ship in this respect, and keep more people around in its apps for longer. 'These gains have been enabled by ongoing optimizations to our ranking systems to better identify the most relevant content to show. We expect to deliver additional improvements throughout the year as we further scale up our models and make recommendations more adaptive to a person's interests within their session.' Meta has also been able to promote more original content, which was another major focus of its algorithmic advancements. Last month, Meta announced an algorithm update which is designed to demote 'unoriginal' content, in order to boost material from original creators, while last year, Instagram removed aggregator accounts from recommendations, and has since sought to replace re-posts with original content in the same where possible. And according to Meta, those efforts are seeing more traffic being driven to original creators: 'On Instagram, over two-thirds of recommended content in the U.S. now comes from original posts. In the second half, we'll be focused on further increasing the freshness of original posts so the right audiences can discover original content from creators soon after it is posted.' This is critical for Meta to maintain its connection with creators, and without them, it's simply not going to be able to capitalize on its opportunities. If original creators go elsewhere, they take their audiences with them, and as Meta moves into the next stage of its Metaverse/AR/VR plan, it's going to need original content creators to maximize audience interest in these new experiences. As such, ensuring that original creators get priority is an important shift, and Meta says that its systems are getting better on this front. Meta also says that it's been using its evolving AI tools to improve content recommendations on Threads: 'The incorporation of LLMs are now driving a meaningful share of the ranking-related time spent gains on Threads.' While it also continues to update its AI-powered ad tools, including automated targeting. 'This quarter, we expanded our new AI-powered recommendation model for ads to new surfaces and improved its performance by using more signals and a longer context. It's driven roughly 5% more ad conversions on Instagram and 3% on Facebook.' So it's not just superintelligence, and Meta's massive investment in the bigger picture AI projects that's driving its approach, it's also applying its AI models to all elements of its apps, and driving notable performance improvements in each. Which is also notable for advertisers, and those looking to make best use of Facebook and Instagram for marketing. Now, Meta's systems are getting better at showing your content to just the right audiences, based on an evolving array of algorithmic indicators, as assessed by AI. That could present new opportunities within your approach. Recommended Reading Meta Shares Ad Tips Based on 1M+ Ad Creatives Sign in to access your portfolio


CNBC
4 hours ago
- CNBC
Jim Cramer attributes market resilience to Big Tech's earnings success
CNBC's Jim Cramer reviewed Monday's market action and told investors that stocks' rebound from last week was lead by positive news from the Magnificent Seven Tech stocks — Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Nvidia and Tesla. "Now, some of that may be because…the Fed has to cut, maybe even before September — I mean, that's how weak the employment numbers are," he said. "But at the heart of the market's resilience is, well…the Magnificent Seven." The indexes closed in the red on Friday as investors worried about a much weaker-than-expected labor report and President Donald Trump's modification of "reciprocal" tariffs on a number of countries. But stocks reversed course on Monday, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 1.34%, the S&P 500 added 1.47% and the Nasdaq Composite surged 1.95%. The market doesn't seem to be concerned that Trump suddenly fired the Bureau of Labor and Statistics Commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, and accused her of manipulating jobs data, Cramer said. Many of stocks that had been strong on Thursday but sank on Friday proceeded to recoup their losses during Monday's session, he pointed out. Cramer reviewed recent earnings from the tech titans, starting with Microsoft. He called the quarter "flawless," saying the company seems to be doing well in every segment of business. He noted that its cloud infrastructure division, Azure, saw a huge acceleration in growth. Cramer was also impressed with some figures from Meta's recent report, especially management's claim that 3.5 billion people use at least one Meta product a day. Alphabet is seeing success throughout the company, Cramer said, including its Google search business, Youtube and AI product, Gemini. He also said the Waymo business is building a nice lead over the rest of the autonomous vehicle space. Apple had a "tremendous" report, Cramer continued, emphasizing its better-than-expected growth. He was encouraged by management's comments on artificial intelligence innovations in the future. Amazon also did well, Cramer continued, with good results from retail sales and advertising revenue, as well as decent numbers from the web services division. While Cramer said Tesla's vehicle business is poor, he said it's doing very well as a tech company. He suggested it's worth owning for its autonomous driving and robots. Although Nvidia has yet to report, Cramer expressed optimism about the chipmaker and demand for its products. "Even though the Mag Seven has one hand tied behind its back with Tesla, we had tepid reactions to Apple and Amazon's numbers," he said. "The fact is that these companies, loaded with cash, not outrageously expensive — nation states, I call them — with multiple revenue streams and tight expenses, just can't be beat by any stretch of the numbers or the imagination." Click here to download Jim Cramer's Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest The CNBC Investing Club Charitable Trust owns shares of Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Alphabet.


Gizmodo
5 hours ago
- Gizmodo
Apple CEO Tim Cook Calls AI ‘Bigger Than the Internet' in Rare All-Hands Meeting
In a global all-hands meeting hosted from Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, California, CEO Tim Cook seemed to admit to what analysts and Apple enthusiasts around the world had been raising concerns about: that Apple has fallen behind competitors in the AI race. And Cook promised employees that the company will be doing everything to catch up. 'Apple must do this. Apple will do this. This is sort of ours to grab,' Cook said, according to Bloomberg, and called the AI revolution 'as big or bigger' than the internet. The meeting took place a day after Apple reported better than expected revenue in its quarterly earnings report, and that sent the company's stock soaring. The report came in a week already marked by great tech earnings results, partially driven by AI. But unlike Meta and Microsoft, Apple's rise in revenue was attributable to iPhone sales and not necessarily a strength in AI. In the earnings call following the report, Cook told investors that Apple was planning to 'significantly' increase its investments in AI and was open to acquisitions to do so. He also said that the company is actively 'reallocating a fair number of people to focus on AI features.' Cook echoed those sentiments in Friday's meeting, saying that the company will be making the necessary investments in AI to catch up to the moment. Apple has been working on integrating advanced AI into its product lineup for the past year or so under its Apple Intelligence initiative, which the company unveiled at the June 2024 Worldwide Developers Conference. The move was met by celebration and criticism even then: Apple's big bet on AI was coming a good year or so after competitors like OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and Meta scaled up their offerings. Even so, the company's progress on Apple Intelligence has been slow. Apple was supposed to unveil an AI-enhanced Siri earlier this year, and even released ads for the new iPhone with AI-enhanced Siri capabilities, but the Cupertino giant pushed that reveal back at the last minute, reportedly to next spring, though nothing is officially confirmed. The switch-up caused major backlash from investors and customers, two major lawsuits, and a complete corporate overhaul. Cook said on Friday that 12,000 workers were hired in the last year, with 40% of them joining research and development teams. The leadership overhaul following the fallout of LLM Siri has 'supercharged' the company's work in AI development, senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi said at the meeting. According to Federighi, the main problem with the LLM Siri rollout was that Apple tried to build a 'hybrid architecture' that utilized two different software systems. That plan has now been scratched, and Federighi seemed confident in LLM Siri's future this time around, claiming that the new 'end-to-end revamp of Siri' will now be delivering 'a much bigger upgrade than we envisioned.' Also key to the new AI strategy, according to Cook, is chip development. Apple has been working on designing in-house AI chips for some time now, according to a Wall Street Journal report from last year, in a project internally code-named ACDC (standing for Apple Chips in Data Center). The tech giant has reportedly teamed up with Broadcom to develop its first AI chip code-named Baltra, according to a report last year in The Information, and Apple is expecting to begin mass production by 2026. Despite being a global leader in tech and a household name in consumer electronics, Apple is nowhere near the top when it comes to the AI race. But while that scares some Apple fans and investors, others think it's actually kind of on-brand. Tim Cook indicated Friday that he belongs to the latter camp. 'We've rarely been first,' Cook said at the meeting. 'There was a PC before the Mac; there was a smartphone before the iPhone; there were many tablets before the iPad; there was an MP3 player before iPod.' Cook has a point. Apple isn't necessarily known for spearheading new technology, but the company's strength comes from perfecting said technology and making products that become highly dominant in their respective markets. And if Apple makes the right moves in developing and scaling its AI product offerings, Cook could potentially add AI to that list as well.