Apple loses top AI executive to Meta's hiring spree
Pang Ruoming, a distinguished engineer and manager in charge of the company's Apple foundation models team, is departing, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
Mr Pang, who joined Apple from Google parent Alphabet in 2021, is the latest big hire for Meta's new superintelligence group, said the people. To secure Mr Pang, Meta offered a package worth tens of millions of dollars per year, the people said.
Meta chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg has been on a hiring spree, bringing on major AI leaders including Scale AI's Alexandr Wang, start-up founder Daniel Gross and former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman with high compensation.
Meta on July 7 also hired Li Yuanzhi, a researcher from OpenAI, and Anton Bakhtin, who worked on Claude, the AI assistant built by at Anthropic, according to other people with knowledge of the matter. In June, Meta hired a slew of other OpenAI researchers.
At Meta, Mr Zuckerberg has made AI the company's top priority as it races to keep pace with rivals like OpenAI and Google. Mr Zuckerberg has been heavily involved in recruiting for the company's AI division, hosting potential hires at his homes in Silicon Valley and Lake Tahoe, and often reaching out personally to potential recruits.
Mr Zuckerberg restructured the company's AI teams at the end of June to better focus on 'superintelligence,' or AI technology that can complete tasks as well as or even better than humans. Meta will spend tens of billions of dollars on AI-related efforts this year, the company has announced, with much of that money going toward infrastructure like data centres and chips.
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At Apple, Mr Pang had been running a roughly 100-person team responsible for the company's large language models, which underpin Apple Intelligence and other AI features on the company's devices. In June, Apple announced that those models would be opened up to third-party developers for the first time, allowing for a range of new iPhone and iPad apps.
But internally, the foundation models team has come under scrutiny from new leadership, which is exploring the use of third-party models, including from either OpenAI or Anthropic, to power a new version of Siri. Those internal discussions have soured some of the morale on the foundation models team, also known as AFM, in recent weeks.
While the company has explored a move to a third-party solution to power the AI in the new Siri, it has simultaneously been working on a new version of Siri based on the models developed by Mr Pang's group. Those models also power Apple Intelligence features that run on Apple devices including email and web article summaries, Genmoji and Priority Notifications.
The major departure, the most significant in Apple's AI ranks since the company started working on Apple Intelligence a few years ago, underscores the heightened competition for talent in the emerging space. Meta has been making offers to the world's top engineers worth many millions of dollars per year – significantly more than what the iPhone maker pays its engineers doing similar work.
Mr Pang's departure could be the start of a string of exits from the AFM group, with several engineers telling colleagues they are planning to leave in the near future to Meta or elsewhere, the people said. Tom Gunter, a top deputy to Mr Pang, left Apple in June.
The foundation models team reports to Daphne Luong, a top deputy to AI senior vice president John Giannandrea. Earlier this year, Mr Giannandrea was sidelined internally and saw Siri, robotics, Core ML and App Intents frameworks and other consumer product-related teams stripped from his command. That came after a poor response to Apple Intelligence and continued delays for new Siri features, including the ability to tap into user data to fulfill commands. BLOOMBERG
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