Amazon loses an AWS Gen AI boss as tech talent shuffle heats up
Amazon's AWS recently lost a key vice president helping oversee generative artificial intelligence development as well as the company's Bedrock service, as the competition for talent heats up.
Vasi Philomin told Reuters in an email that he left Amazon for another company, without providing specifics. A company spokesperson confirmed that Philomin had recently left after eight years with Amazon. Philomin helped lead generative AI efforts and product strategy, and oversaw foundation models known as Amazon Titan.
The spokesperson said Rajesh Sheth, a vice president previously overseeing Amazon Elastic Block Store, had assumed some of Philomin's responsibilities. Philomin left Amazon earlier in June. In his biography, Philomin said he helped create and lead Amazon Bedrock, a hub for using multiple AI models and one of AWS's premier products in its battle for AI supremacy.
He was a frequent speaker at AWS events, including Amazon's annual cloud computing conference in Las Vegas. An Amazon spokesman noted that there are other vice presidents at AWS who also work on generative AI projects.
Amazon is working to bolster its reputation in AI development, after rivals like OpenAI, and Google have taken an early lead, particularly with consumer-focused models.
The Seattle-based online retailer and technology powerhouse has invested $8 billion in AI startup Anthropic and integrated its Claude software into its own products including a new revamped version of voice assistant Alexa that it's rolling out to customers this year.
In December, Amazon introduced its Nova AI models which provide for text, video and image generation. Earlier this year, it added to the lineup with a version called Sonic that can more readily produce natural-sounding speech. Companies are employing creative techniques to hire top AI talent, including using sports industry data analysis to help identify undiscovered talent, Reuters reported last month.
As a result, compensation has skyrocketed for some. However, as Amazon races to produce more advanced AI, it said it expects its own success will lead to fewer corporate jobs, according to a memo from CEO Andy Jassy last week.
Job growth limits will be driven in particular by so-called agentic AI, which can perform tasks with minimal or even no additional input from people.
"As we roll out more Generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done. We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today and more people doing other types of jobs," Jassy wrote.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
ETtech Deals Digest: Startups raise $738 million in June, down 60% on-year
ETtech ETtech ETtech ETtech Indian startups raised about $738.5 million in funding between June 1 and 27, marking a 60% decrease from the full month last year, when they had raised a total of $1.8 billion across 207 month, startups, primarily in the seed, early and late stages, secured funding through 68 rounds, according to data from market intelligence platform May 2025, startups raised around $1.06 billion from 79 week — from June 21 to June 27 — startups raised around $276.3 drone manufacturing startup Raphe mPhibr raised $100 million in an equity funding round led by Silicon Valley investor General Catalyst. The round also saw participation from existing investors, including stock market investor Amal Parikh, Think Investments, and other family firm Cred closed a funding round of about $72 million at a sharply reduced valuation of $3.5 billion. This marks a steep 45% cut from the $6.4 billion valuation at which the company last raised capital in 2022. Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC , through its investment arm Lathe Investment, led the Singapore-based wealth management platform raised $53 million in a fresh funding round, led by two UK-based family offices. In August 2024, the company had raised $27 million as part of the same round, and this extension takes the total funds raised in the round to $80 million.Y Combinator-backed cross-border payments startup Aspora raised $53 million in Series B funding, co-led by Sequoia and Greylock, with Quantum Light Ventures also contributing to the non-banking finance company (NBFC) Flexiloans raised around $43.8 million in a mix of primary and secondary capital. The round was led by existing investors Nandan Nilekani's Fundamentum, US-based impact investor Accion Digital Transformation, American asset management firm Nuveen, and Denmark-based asset management major Maj Invest.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Microsoft's next-gen AI chip production delayed to 2026: Report
Synopsis Microsoft's next-gen Maia AI chip, code-named Braga, faces a six-month delay, pushing mass production to 2026. Design changes, staffing issues, and turnover caused setbacks. The chip is expected to underperform compared to Nvidia's Blackwell. Microsoft trails Amazon and Google, who've advanced faster in custom AI chip development and deployment.


India Gazette
an hour ago
- India Gazette
Adani Group becomes India's fastest growing brand, Tata continues to lead as most valuable brand
New Delhi [India], Jun 27 (ANI): Adani Group has been named as the fastest-growing brand in India, driven by its focused and expansive approach to infrastructure, as per the Most Valuable Indian Brands 2025 rankings by Brand Finance. The brand's value surged from USD 3.55 billion in 2024 to USD 6.46 billion, marking a significant increase of USD 2.91 billion. This jump reflects the Group's strategic direction, resilience, and dedication to sustainable growth. Notably, the value added this year exceeds Adani's entire brand valuation in 2023. Thanks to this growth, Adani has advanced to the 13th position, up from 16th last year, underscoring its rising prominence among India's top brands. 'Adani Group recorded the highest brand growth this year, with an 82 per cent increase in value. This progress stems from its aggressive infrastructure strategy, expanding green energy goals, and enhanced brand perception among stakeholders,' the report noted. Tata Group continues to lead as the most valuable Indian brand, with its value increasing 10 per cent to USD 31.6 billion. This milestone reflects both India's growing economic influence and Tata's broad presence across industries including electronics, EVs, semiconductors, AI, and clean energy. In second place, Infosys saw its brand value rise 15 per cent to USD 16.3 billion, maintaining leadership in IT services. HDFC Group, now ranked third with a 37 per cent rise to USD 14.2 billion, has strengthened its position in the financial sector following its merger with HDFC Ltd. LIC, ranked fourth, recorded a 35 per cent growth to USD 13.6 billion, while HCLTech moved up to eighth place, growing 17 per cent to USD 8.9 billion. Larsen & Toubro, with a 3 per cent increase to USD 7.4 billion, secured the ninth spot, driven by its focus on high-tech manufacturing and expansion into renewables and semiconductors. At number ten, Mahindra Group experienced 9 per cent growth, reaching a brand value of USD 7.2 billion, supported by advances in technology and engineering. Brand Finance, a UK-based brand valuation consultancy, uses a detailed methodology for its annual rankings. This includes factors like the Brand Strength Index (which considers consumer sentiment and behavior), Brand Impact (via royalty rate analysis), and Forecast Revenues (which predict the brand's future economic contribution). According to Brand Finance's 2025 report, the collective brand value of companies in the India 100 rankings now stands at USD 236.5 billion. With India's GDP growth for FY2025-26 expected between 6 and 7 per cent, supported by robust capital expenditure, rising domestic demand, and strong public-private collaboration, Indian brands are poised to tap into emerging opportunities despite global challenges. (ANI)