Meta's Llama AI team has been bleeding talent. Many top researchers have joined French AI startup Mistral.
Of the 14 authors credited on the landmark 2023 paper that introduced Llama to the world, just three still work at Meta: research scientist Hugo Touvron, research engineer Xavier Martinet, and technical program leader Faisal Azhar. The rest have left the company, many of them to join or found its emerging rivals.
Meta's brain drain is most visible at Mistral, the Paris-based startup co-founded by former Meta researchers Guillaume Lample and Timothée Lacroix, two of Llama's key architects. Alongside several fellow Meta alums, they're building powerful open-source models that directly compete with Meta's flagship AI efforts.
The exits over time raise questions about Meta's ability to retain top AI talent just as it faces a new wave of external and internal pressure. The company is delaying its largest-ever AI model, Behemoth, after internal concerns about its performance and leadership, The Wall Street Journal reported. Llama 4, Meta's latest release, received a lukewarm reception from developers, many of whom now look to faster-moving open-source rivals like DeepSeek and Qwen for cutting-edge capabilities.
Inside Meta, the research team has also seen a shake-up. Joelle Pineau, who led the company's Fundamental AI Research group (FAIR) for eight years, announced last month that she would step down. She will be replaced by Robert Fergus, who co-founded FAIR in 2014 and then spent five years at Google's DeepMind before rejoining Meta this month.
The leadership reshuffle follows a period of quiet attrition. Many of the researchers behind Llama's initial success have left FAIR since publishing their landmark paper, even as Meta continues to position the model family as central to its AI strategy. With so many of its original architects gone and rivals moving faster in open-source innovation, Meta now faces the challenge of defending its early lead without the team that built it.
That's particularly significant because the 2023 Llama paper was more than just a technical milestone. It helped legitimize open-weight large language models with underlying code and parameters that are freely available for others to use, modify, and build on, as viable alternatives to proprietary systems at the time, like OpenAI's GPT-3 and Google's PaLM.
Meta trained its models using only publicly available data and optimized them for efficiency, enabling researchers and developers to run state-of-the-art systems on a single GPU chip. For a moment, Meta looked like it could lead the open frontier.
Two years later, that lead has slipped, and Meta no longer sets the pace.
Despite investing billions into AI, Meta still doesn't have a dedicated "reasoning" model, one built specifically to handle tasks that require multi-step thinking, problem-solving, or calling external tools to complete complex commands. That gap has grown more noticeable as other companies like Google and OpenAI prioritize these features in their latest models.
The average tenure of the 11 departed authors at Meta was over five years, suggesting they weren't short-term hires but researchers deeply embedded in Meta's AI efforts. Some left as early as January 2023; others stayed through the Llama 3 cycle, and a few left as recently as this year. Together, their exits mark the quiet unraveling of the team that helped Meta stake its AI reputation on open models.
A Meta spokesperson pointed to an X post about Llama research paper authors who have left.
The list below, based on information from the researchers' LinkedIn profiles, shows where each of them ended up.
Naman Goyal
Left Meta: February 2025
Time at Meta: 6 years, 7 months
Baptiste Rozière
Current role: AI Scientist at Mistral
Left Meta: August 2024
Time at Meta: 5 years, 1 month
Aurélien Rodriguez
Current role: Director, Foundation Model Training at Cohere
Left Meta: July 2024
Time at Meta: 2 years, 7 months
Eric Hambro
Current role: Member of Technical Staff at Anthropic
Left Meta: November 2023
Time at Meta: 3 years, 3 months
Timothée Lacroix
Left Meta: June 2023
Time at Meta: 8 years, 5 months
Marie-Anne Lachaux
Current role: Founding Member and AI Research Engineer at Mistral
Left Meta: June 2023
Time at Meta: 5 years
Thibaut Lavril
Current role: AI Research Engineer at Mistral
Left Meta: June 2023
Time at Meta: 4 years, 5 months
Armand Joulin
Current role: Distinguished Scientist at Google DeepMind
Left Meta: May 2023
Time at Meta: 8 years, 8 months
Gautier Izacard
Current role: Technical Staff at Microsoft AI
Left Meta: March 2023
Time at Meta: 3 years, 2 months
Edouard Grave
Current role: Research Scientist at Kyutai
Left Meta: February 2023
Time at Meta: 7 years, 2 months
Guillaume Lample
Left Meta: Early 2023
Time at Meta: 7 years
Hashtags

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


TechCrunch
12 minutes ago
- TechCrunch
Meta users say paying for Verified support has been useless in the face of mass bans
When Meta launched its paid verification service, Meta Verified, in 2023, the tech giant promised users and businesses alike that part of the offering would include direct access to customer support. However, amid a mass ban wave affecting Facebook and Instagram accounts, as well as Facebook Groups, some Meta Verified paying subscribers say they're receiving little to no help from Meta's customer service reps, even when they're facing their most serious crisis yet: a mistakenly suspended account. In emails to TechCrunch and in posts elsewhere on social media, users have shared their interactions with Meta Verified support reps, who they claim have been dismissive and unhelpful. These account bans, which some speculate have been triggered by AI systems, have been affecting users for weeks and months. A petition begging Meta to resolve the issues has reached north of 25,500 signatures and continues growing. On Reddit, users have been organizing to offer each other tips on how to proceed or support. Many are even threatening legal action. While tens of thousands may be affected by these bans, that's a small drop in the bucket for Meta, which counts its user base in the billions. Still, for those whose business or personal brand has suddenly disappeared from Facebook or Instagram, the losses are significant. Others who have simply lost access to years' worth of uploaded photos and interactions with friends are similarly devastated. To date, Meta has only publicly acknowledged the ban affecting Facebook Groups, saying last week that it was fixing the 'technical error' that led to the suspensions. On an Instagram help page, there's also a brief mention of the problem. Meta has not confirmed whether AI, malware, or some other issue has led to the bans. Screenshot Instead, on its Instagram Help page, Meta only notes that it's aware 'that some of you are having issues accessing your Instagram account. We're looking into it and apologize for the inconvenience.' For users who have now lost access to their accounts for extended periods, despite appeals, these are more than inconveniences. 'I opened around 5-6 tickets on my Verified account. The agents were dismissive and even closed the chat,' one Meta user, Manya Khurana, told TechCrunch. 'I have had the account since 2017 and never had an issue. They suspended me, saying I did not follow community guidelines, which is false. I had almost 12,000 followers and was going to launch my small business on it to have income, but I have not been able to start it. My career has been affected. … This has been heartbreaking.' Image Credits:screenshot of Meta Verified chat, via Manya Khurana In other emails with TechCrunch, users describe having unproductive conversations with reps who seem unable to resolve issues with the erroneous bans. 'Back in April, I got my Instagram account … falsely disabled for 'creating accounts while suspended' when I never even made any account, nor have I ever been suspended before. This was a false ban because I have never done anything to break [Meta's] Community Guidelines,' shared an Instagram user, Nikolas Alvarez, in an email with TechCrunch. 'On April 3, I purchased Meta Verified via Facebook, and it has been three months, and still just going back and forth with these workers.' @andymstone Even your Instagram support has confirmed that there is a BAN WAVE going on my Instagram account @officialyourboyabdul has been suspended for over a month my business and reputation are hurt — official_YourboyAbdul (@OYourboyabdul) June 28, 2025 These complaints are only representative of the concerns we've heard about, both directly from users and from their posts across social media. In Reddit threads, users describe Meta Verified reps as 'extremely unhelpful,' 'giving out canned responses,' offering 'no help,' and describe waiting hours for responses, and more. Some noted that when they signed up for Meta Verified to get help, they were put on a waitlist instead of gaining access. According to at least one user, a Meta rep said the company was overwhelmed with a malware issue and was overloaded with support tickets. We cannot confirm this, and Meta hasn't provided insight. However, there is some evidence that some users have been regaining access to their accounts, weeks or months after their original suspensions. Reached for comment, Meta Communications Director Andy Stone again declined to share a statement or an update on the ongoing problem, leaving users in the dark.


Hamilton Spectator
13 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Cold Lake pharmacist Bob Mattice retires after 44 Years, eyes mayoral run
On June 25, Mattice was celebrated by family, staff, and longtime customers during a farewell event marking his retirement from pharmacy management. His last official day on the job will be June 29. 'I have mixed emotions about it. It's such a privilege to be people's pharmacist,' Mattice said. 'But it's time.' For 44 years, Mattice built a career around care and connection. He began his journey on May 21, 1981, in Westlock. 'I thought I was the king of everything because I made $12.50 an hour,' he joked. 'I drove a Camaro and had a mullet,' he recalled. After working in Rocky Mountain House, Mattice and his family made Cold Lake home on August 2, 1988. Mattice recalled buying the original pharmacy on Main Street, where Panago sits today, and relocating to the mall in 1997. Since then, Tri-City Guardian has been a cornerstone of the community. Reflecting on the relationships he built over that time, Mattice said, 'You could give better health care by knowing the family history and everything, so that was really cool,' adding that in some cases he has served three generations of families. Beyond medications and prescriptions, Mattice became known for his humor, generosity, and Saskatchewan work ethic. 'I get to try a lot of jokes on everybody, so that's always good,' he laughed. Though he's stepping away from the pharmacy, Mattice won't be stepping away from Cold Lake. 'We do have plans, we're not going anywhere. I'm just retiring from pharmacy management.' And he's already preparing for his next chapter, running for mayor in the upcoming municipal election. 'I've always had that public service in my mind, like, bloom where you're planted,' he said. 'I always want to give back to the community, make Cold Lake a better place for people.' His years as a pharmacist, he said, have given him deep insights into healthcare access, community needs, and crisis management. 'How to bridge the gaps in the doctor shortage, how to bridge the gaps in human kindness where people don't have any money,' he explained. 'Just that whole how to take care of a town or your base of patients.' Even in retirement, Mattice plans to keep his license active. 'Because it's like your grandpa's driver's license — if you give it up, you don't get it back,' he said. With 37 years in Cold Lake and 44 in pharmacy, Mattice remains grateful. 'I've been very fortunate, and I put the work in, but still — been very fortunate with people and customers and staff.' Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


Android Authority
16 minutes ago
- Android Authority
Nothing's Android 16 update will arrive before the end of the quarter as Nothing OS 4.0
Nothing TL;DR Nothing has confirmed that its Android 16 update will reach users by September. Nothing OS 4.0 will likely debut on the newly launched Phone 3 before rolling out to older models. Nothing Phone 2 and newer models will receive the update, but the original Phone 1 is not eligible. Thanks to Google releasing stable Android 16 for its Pixel lineup earlier than usual, several OEMs are expected to ship their Android 16 updates ahead of schedule this year. Samsung will likely debut One UI 8 based on Android 16 with the upcoming Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7. Nothing has also confirmed that it will follow suit by releasing Nothing OS 4.0 much earlier. During yesterday's Phone 3 launch event, Nothing announced that although its new flagship will ship with Nothing OS 3.5 based on Android 15, Nothing OS 4.0 based on Android 16 will 'arrive in Q3 2025.' We suspect the platform upgrade will first reach the newly launched Phone 3, before rolling out to older models. Nothing Phone 2 and newer models will receive the Android 16 update, but the original Phone 1 is not eligible for the release. At the moment, Nothing has not shared the exact release timeline for these devices. We expect the company to share all details closer to the rollout. We have little information about the features and improvements that could arrive with Nothing OS 4.0, but it's safe to assume that it will include all the significant changes included in Android 16. Nothing will likely test beta builds with select users ahead of the stable release, which should give us a better idea of what's new in the update. Got a tip? Talk to us! Email our staff at Email our staff at news@ . You can stay anonymous or get credit for the info, it's your choice.