
Meta wanted to buy a $30 billion AI startup: report. What it is trying instead.
Meta Platforms stock has climbed this year in response to the social media company's progress with artificial-intelligence. Now, it is reportedly stepping up its efforts, trying to acquire a major AI start-up and recruiting new AI executives.
Meta looked to buy Safe Superintelligence earlier this year but was rebuffed by its founder Ilya Sutskever, CNBC reported late Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. Safe Superintelligence was valued at $30 billion in a funding round in March.
Meta and Safe Superintelligence didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
On the face of it, such an acquisition would have been an odd move. Safe Superintelligence hasn't released any products, as it concentrates on developing supersmart AI. Meta has also been getting along perfectly well on its own, with its stock up 19% so far this year.
The real attraction of such a deal likely would have been to get Sutskever and his key employees on board.
Sutskever was previously chief scientist at OpenAI, where he helped develop the technology behind ChatGPT. He left OpenAI last year following a break with its CEO Sam Altman, and subsequently launched Safe Superintelligence.
Thwarted in his efforts to bring Sutskever on board, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has instead negotiated to recruit Safe Superintelligence's CEO Daniel Gross, as well as former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, according to CNBC. Gross and Friedman are partners in the investment fund NFDG, which has backed several AI start-ups.
So far, Meta has relied on in-house AI models, as opposed to acquiring or funding an AI start-up as Microsoft has done with OpenAI and Amazon.com has with Anthropic. However, there have been signs that Zuckerberg feels Meta's AI team needs bolstering.
Last week, Meta completed an investment in Scale AI. The Wall Street Journal reported that Meta would pump $14 billion into the data-labeling company in exchange for a 49% stake and that Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang would join Meta.
The bigger picture here is that multiple AI companies have delayed the releases of their next flagship models amid concerns they don't show sufficient improvement. That suggests the industry's 'scaling law," the idea that larger and more complex models are automatically more intelligent, is breaking down.
Meta is among those struggling to make a breakthrough. Its 'Behemoth" model, originally meant to be released in April, is being delayed until fall or later, according to the Journal.
The response from AI companies has been the development of so-called reasoning models that break down problems step-by-step. However, a recent paper from researchers at Apple found 'fundamental limitations" in such models. At tasks beyond a certain level of complexity, these AIs suffered 'complete accuracy collapse," according to the researchers.
That suggests the industry will need to adopt new techniques to push AI to the next level of intelligence. Meta will hope that its new recruits can get there first.

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


Mint
42 minutes ago
- Mint
AI tracker: Tesla robotaxis hit the road and other AI news
Tesla launches its robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, but faces fierce competition from Waymo and Zoox. Meanwhile, Deezer flags AI-generated music to protect artists' royalties, and OpenAI's new hardware venture encounters legal challenges. The race for AI innovation is heating up. Tesla began offering robotaxi services recently in the US city of Austin, Texas. 'Super congratulations to the @Tesla_AI software & chip design teams on a successful @Robotaxi launch!!' Musk posted on X. The kickoff will employ the Model Y sport utility vehicle rather than Tesla's much-touted Cybercab, which is still under development. Tesla is deploying only 10 to 20 vehicles initially, aiming to show its cars can safely navigate real-world traffic. It's not the only robotaxi currently cruising the streets of Austin. Waymo, the driverless-car unit from Alphabet is scaling up in the city through a partnership with Uber, while Amazon's Zoox is also testing there, Bloomberg reported. Music streaming app Deezer French streaming service Deezer is now alerting users when they come across music identified as completely generated by artificial intelligence, AFP reported. Deezer said in January that it was receiving uploads of 10,000 AI tracks a day, doubling to over 20,000 in an April statement—or around 18% of all music added to the platform. The company 'wants to make sure that royalties supposed to go to artists aren't being taken away' by tracks generated from a brief text prompt typed into a music generator like Suno or Udio, the company said. AI tracks are not being removed from Deezer's library, but instead are demonetised to avoid unfairly reducing human musicians' royalties. Albums containing tracks suspected of being created in this way are now flagged with a notice reading 'content generated by AI'. A budding partnership between OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and legendary iPhone designer Jony Ive to develop a new artificial intelligence hardware product has hit a legal snag after a US judge ruled they must temporarily stop marketing the new venture. OpenAI last month announced it was buying io Products, a product and engineering company co-founded by Ive, but it quickly faced a trademark complaint from a startup with a similarly sounding name, IYO, which is also developing AI hardware that it had pitched to Altman's personal investment firm and Ive's design firm in 2022.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Alibaba unveils latest AI service for images in push for users
HighlightsAlibaba Group Holding Ltd. introduced Qwen VLo, an upgraded artificial intelligence model capable of generating images from text and modifying existing images, as part of its Qwen brand. The new Qwen VLo model features progressive generation technology, allowing users to observe the image creation process in real-time, enhancing user interaction and creativity. With a focus on artificial general intelligence, Alibaba aims to compete with other technology leaders in the rapidly evolving AI market, responding to innovations from companies like DeepSeek and OpenAI. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. unveiled a new iteration of its artificial-intelligence technology that will make it easier for users to generate and modify images from texts and visuals, as the Chinese ecommerce giant continues its aggressive push into AI. The Hangzhou-based company introduced Qwen VLo , part of a series of AI services under the company's Qwen brand. The new model is an upgrade from Qwen2.5-VL and is now able to generate text-to-image and image-to-image results. It also has a technology called progressive generation, meaning users can see the process as an image is created. 'This newly upgraded model not only 'understands' the world but also generates high-quality recreations based on that understanding,' the company said in a blog post. 'You can directly send a prompt like 'Generate a picture of a cute cat' to generate an image or upload an image of a cat and ask 'Add a cap on the cat's head' to modify an image.' Best known for its ecommerce operations in China, Alibaba has been charging into AI and building standalone offerings around Qwen. In February, Chief Executive Officer Eddie Wu went so far as to say the company's 'primary objective' is now artificial general intelligence , a goal in the industry to build AI systems with human-level intellectual capabilities. With the new Qwen multimodal model , it's aiming to compete with a flurry of new visual interfaces in the market, including from OpenAI. It also faces aggressive domestic competition from the likes of DeepSeek. After DeepSeek stunned the industry with a powerful model it said took just a few million dollars to build, China's technology leaders flooded the market with a rapid succession of low-cost AI services. Alibaba has rapidly updated its Qwen series, adding new capabilities to process text, pictures, audio and video — with the efficiency to run directly on phones and laptops. It unveiled a new version of its AI assistant Quark app in March.


Indian Express
3 hours ago
- Indian Express
OpenAI employee set to join Meta calls the ‘$100 million signing bonus' fake news
In the last few months, Meta has been poaching AI researchers left and right to its superintelligence lab by paying them hefty 'signing bonuses', which some say amount to $100 million. However, this might not be the case. In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Lucas Beyer, who is currently working at OpenAI and will soon join Meta, says that the $100 million sign-up bonus is 'fake news.' Beyer also confirmed that he will be joined by Alexander Kolesnikov and Xiaohua Zhai, who are currently working at OpenAI. Last week, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that Meta was trying to poach AI researchers from his company by offering them bonuses of $100 million. In a podcast hosted by OpenAI, Altman claimed that 'Meta started making giant offers to a lot of people on our team' and that 'at least, so far, none of our best people have decided to take them up on that.' According to a report by The Verge, when Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth was asked about the '$100 million signing bonuses', he said, 'Sam is just being dishonest here. He's suggesting that we're doing this for every single person…Look, you guys, the market's hot. It's not that hot.' Bosworth added that Altman is trying to counter all these offers and that it 'is not the general thing that's happening in the AI space.' The Meta CEO went on to say that there are a couple of more people joining the company, but declined to share details. However, Bosworth wasn't the only Meta executive to mention OpenAI at the internal meeting. CPO Chris Cox said that instead of building a ChatGPT-like AI chatbot that helps people with things like writing work emails, Meta wants to differentiate its AI offerings by focusing 'on entertainment, on connection with friends, on how people live their lives.' Compared to Google and OpenAI, Meta is finding it hard to compete in the AI race. However, the Mark Zuckerberg-owned company recently built its superintelligence team and is on a hiring spree. Recently, Meta purchased a 49 per cent stake in Scale AI and hired its 28 year old CEO Alexandr Wang to lead its newly formed team.