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Inside the rise of Alexandr Wang and Meta's $14 billion bet that the MIT dropout will help bring AI supremacy
Inside the rise of Alexandr Wang and Meta's $14 billion bet that the MIT dropout will help bring AI supremacy

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Inside the rise of Alexandr Wang and Meta's $14 billion bet that the MIT dropout will help bring AI supremacy

As their heads were measured and fitted for custom-made, felt cowboy hats, the 100 or so guests assembled in Utah's scenic Wasatch Mountains in November 2023 had ample reason to feel special. The group of AI executives, venture capitalists, government officials, and policy folks, had been handpicked to attend a secretive, three-day retreat focused on the national security implications of artificial intelligence. Presiding over the confab was Alexandr Wang, the young CEO of data labeling AI startup Scale. Wang's company was eight years old and already worth $13 billion at the time, but the event at the Montage Deer Valley, co-hosted with longtime Scale angel investor Nat Friedman, was clearly intended to signal Wang's status as more than just the latest Silicon Valley wunderkind. Sitting alongside gray-haired Pentagon top brass, the 26-year-old Wang held forth on the U.S.-China AI arms race and other weighty topics. One attendee recalled Wang as a well-spoken master of ceremonies, but with an agenda to sell. 'My impression is that [it] was a bit of a sales event to show off to his investors and government customers that he had a fantastic network,' he told Fortune. Another attendee said Wang was a 'generous' host, but added he was unsettled by the 'theatrical hawkishness'—what he described as a 'fairly transparent effort to ingratiate himself with the national security establishment.' In an unexpected, dramatic follow-up as attendees flew home from Utah, the day after the event, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was abruptly fired. Within 48 hours, as chaos unfolded inside OpenAI's nonprofit boardroom, Wang and Friedman were both quietly approached to serve as interim CEO. Both declined. By then, however, it was clear: Wang, who was already known in some D.C. circles as Washington's 'AI whisperer,' had come a long way since co-founding Scale AI in 2016 with Lucy Guo, back when he was a 19-year-old MIT dropout building a data-labeling startup for self-driving cars (to help teach AI systems to know the difference between, say, a blowing plastic bag and a pedestrian). In just a few years, he had transformed Scale into a generative AI powerhouse—first by hiring tens of thousands of workers to manually sift through and label massive datasets to help train AI models, then to run model evaluations and fine-tune systems for companies like OpenAI, SAP, and Toyota through techniques like reinforcement learning. In 2021, at just 24, he briefly became the youngest self-made billionaire after a funding round which valued the company north of $7 billion. But when news emerged this month that Wang was joining Meta to be part of a new 'superintelligence' team reporting directly to Mark Zuckerberg, part of a $14.3 billion acqui-hire, industry watchers were still stunned. The deal, which values Scale at $29 billion and Wang's personal stake at a reported $5 billion, is Meta's largest outside investment ever. The stakes couldn't be higher for Meta, as it transitions its business into the rapidly-evolving AI era and races against giants like Google and OpenAI to develop all-powerful AGI and 'superintelligence' capabilities. In Wang, and in the 49% stake in Scale that Meta is acquiring, Zuckerberg appears to see a secret weapon. There are even rumors that Wang could be crowned the head of Meta's entire AI operations—rumors that have only added to the consternation among those wondering how a young entrepreneur whose business relies more on manual labor than large language models fits into Meta's quest for AI supremacy. Fortune spoke to more than more than a dozen people close to Wang, including current and former Scale employees, investors, acquaintances, and competitors, to trace how the 28-year-old MIT dropout built the business at the center of one of the richest deals in the AI boom, and to understand why Meta is betting so much on it. Meta declined to comment or to make Wang available. 'Alex is a great recruiter, a really savvy commercial person,' said one former Scale manager. 'Who knows if it'll work out? Maybe he builds a better AI team into something Herculean, maybe not, but you're gonna bet on someone to do it. There's probably a handful of people in the world that you bet on to do it. I think he's probably one of them.' Meta's relationship with Scale dates back to 2019, when the social media company began using Scale as a data provider for its AI efforts. In 2024, when Scale raised $1 billion in its Series F funding round, Meta was among the investors, scooping up half-a-million shares of the startup's stock. Zuckerberg and Wang began spending more time together beginning in April, when Zuckerberg reached out and expressed a desire to work more closely, according to a source familiar with the negotiations. The Meta CEO, who had once also held the title of the world's youngest self-made billionaire, began inviting Wang to pow-wow with him at his houses in Lake Tahoe and Palo Alto, with Zuckerberg soon coming to trust Wang's opinion. Advisors say that Zuckerberg would sometimes reference Wang's views in conversations with them, The Information reported. The conversations between two CEOs came at a time when Zuckerberg was growing frustrated with Meta's struggles keeping up with rival AI labs such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind. Meta had succeeded in creating a family of successful open-source AI models, called Llama, but never seemed able to stay in front of the pack for long. OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind would inevitably surge past Meta with AI models that captured more attention and mindshare among AI developers. With the release of Llama 4 in April 2025, Meta's malaise became a crisis. Allegations of possibly inflated performance metrics, a rushed release, and a lack of transparency, along with indications that Meta was failing to keep pace with open-source AI rivals like China's DeepSeek, led many in the industry to proclaim Meta's latest AI model a flop. (Meta has called claims that it gamed performance metrics 'simply not true,' and ascribed reports of Llama 4s 'mixed performance' at launch to early bugs). To regain the edge, Meta has moved aggressively to amass AI talent and realign its efforts. News reports this week have claimed Meta recently held talks to acquire AI firm Perplexity, as well as Safe Superintelligence, the startup founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever. According to one source familiar with the matter, Meta is currently in talks to acquire the AI venture capital fund managed by Friedman, the Scale investor, and Safe Superintelligence executive Daniel Gross. The discussions with Scale appear to have occurred in parallel to many of Meta's other talks. Wang resisted Zuckerberg's initial proposal that he join Meta, saying that if he were to leave his startup, any deal would have to involve an immediate (and worthwhile) outcome for Scale's investors, according to the source familiar with the negotiations. Throughout May, the two CEOs held on-and-off discussions, going from a proposed $5 billion Meta non-voting investment in Scale to the eventual arrangement of Meta investing $14.3 billion for 49% of Scale in non-voting shares with potential future conversion. (The deal also includes a poison pill provision: If Wang leaves Meta, the shares would convert at a rate of 1.5, creating additional dilution, incentivizing Wang to make a long-term commitment to Meta.) Some sources close to Wang, whose first name is spelled without the second 'e' to give it the eight characters associated with good fortune in Chinese culture, said the deal he reached with Zuckerberg shows his commitment to doing right by his investors and employees rather than abandoning them for his own lucrative exit. Still, the news that Wang was leaving came as a big surprise to many people connected to Scale and its CEO. 'It was a total shock,' said the former Scale AI manager, who left the company last month. 'I never thought about the idea of Alex leaving Scale, especially when we'd just announced the tender offer at a $25 billion valuation. I think about how fast it all happened.' Scale responded to Fortune's request for comment by pointing to a blog post from new CEO Jason Droege that affirms the company's continued independence, its commitment to not favoring any specific AI models, and hinting at upcoming announcements. After the deal was publicly announced, Wang addressed Scale employees at the company's South of Market office in San Francisco. He got a standing ovation as he walked down a winding staircase to the office building's atrium. He cried at times as he spoke to employees about his time at Scale and starting the company when he was a freshman at college. Perhaps Wang was thinking even further back to his childhood, as the son of immigrant parents who were nuclear physicists at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, which had served as the top-secret site for developing the first atomic bombs, led by J. Robert Oppenheimer. 'In my town, basically everybody's parents worked for the National Lab,' he told Fortune in an interview last year. 'Every adult around me was a scientist who had made the pledge to use their scientific capability and their powers for enhancing technologies that would ensure the continued security of the United States.' That upbringing provided the template Wang used to make Scale into a successful business, said Jared Friedman, a group partner at Y Combinator. 'He built an extremely talent-dense team and intense culture with people similar to him, other exceptional math and CS [computer science] students,' Friedman said. Wang, who competed in national math competitions in high school, dropped out of MIT after one year to pursue the startup dream, teaming up with Lucy Guo, a product designer at Quora, who had herself dropped out of Carnegie Mellon to pursue a Thiel Fellowship and had been Snap's first female designer. The duo originally planned to create tech for a doctors' concierge service, but after joining startup accelerator Y Combinator in summer of 2016, they eventually pivoted to data labelling. 'They were originally working on completely different ideas and spent most of the first summer just figuring out what to build,' recalls Friedman, who served as Wang and Guo's partner at Y Combinator in 2016. Once it pivoted to data labelling, Scale found the perfect customer base in the rapidly-expanding, and well-funded, group of startups working to build self-driving vehicles. Wang embodied the company credo of 'Ambition shapes reality,' said an early employee who left in 2022. 'Alex himself would get deeply involved in customer engagements when needed, including deep-diving into both technical challenges and helping to network and negotiate with higher-ups on the business side to help us win customers and new business.' Another source, the former Scale manager, described two-hour-long daily meetings 'where we would review every single account.' The routine was not universally enjoyed inside the ranks, the person said, 'but honestly, in retrospect it forced everyone to be very rigorous.' Tensions between the two cofounders soon surfaced as the company grew. Guo had recruited Wang, and she was the original CEO. But the two founders could not get along, clashing over how they each deemed their counterpart was handling their duties, according to a source familiar with the matter. The board sided with Wang, who became CEO, and Guo left the company in 2018, according to this person's account. Guo told Fortune that when Wang proposed taking on the CEO role after the Series A, believing 'he'd be better as the face of an API company,' she agreed. 'I wasn't title centric and was fine with it,' she said in an email. Guo told Fortune she had received $750 million as a result of the Meta deal, but did not comment on the current state of her relationship with Wang. In recent years, Scale has run into concerns about its labor practices with the estimated tens of thousands of contractors it employs around the world to manually label data and review images. A Department of Labor investigation was opened in 2024 and closed in May around the company's adherence to the Fair Labor Standards Act, particularly around fair pay and worker classification. There are currently two labor lawsuits against Scale that are ongoing. Glenn Danas, partner at Clarkson Law Firm—which brought those cases against the company—estimates the company's contractor workforce could be roughly 60,000 people. One thing that makes the Meta/Scale deal notable is that Wang had always emphasized that he is not a researcher, and that Scale AI was not building AI models. Instead, it wanted to provide the entire generative AI ecosystem with high-quality data to train its models. 'We're not out there developing a leading large language model,' Wang told Fortune last year. 'But we do serve the entire ecosystem. Nearly every major large language model is built on top of our data foundry.' Scale was also agnostic when it came to working with customers. It did some of the earliest experiments on reinforcement learning human feedback (RLHF), with OpenAI in 2019, with the team that later became Anthropic. Scale continued collaborating with both AI startups. 'We're both neutral across the entire ecosystem and we're able to have very strong relations with every relevant company in the AI ecosystem across the stack,' Wang said. Scale has said it will continue to operate as an independent company (with Wang as chairman), serving other customers. Under the terms of the deal, Meta will spend a minimum of $500 million a year for Scale data over the next five years, according to the source familiar with the negotiations. But the perception of neutrality now looks all but dead. Following the announcement, news reports said that both Google and OpenAI were planning to end their relationship with Scale. Some industry observers speculate that Meta's real strategy all along was a data landgrab, a move to secure a major source of one of the vital components for building AI models—and to deprive others of it. But several industry insiders that Fortune spoke to were skeptical of the theory. Ryan Kolln, CEO of Scale AI competitor Appen, said he doubts the Meta/Scale deal is about consolidating data vendors or starving competitors seeking data. There's a risk in doing that because there's a strong benefit to having diversity in data, with vendors that have different specialties and expertise, he said. So what is the key thing Zuckerberg is getting for his $14.3 billion? Several sources close to the companies said they'd heard that Wang is being considered as a potential leader for Meta's entire AI organization—a far more powerful remit than the 'superintelligence' team, which some news reports have said will consist of 50 people and be helmed by Wang. Erik Meijer, a former engineering leader at Meta, said he would not be surprised by a move to make Wang a 'chief AI officer' of all of Meta. 'Heaping everything into a single org makes sense,' he said. 'In fact I would be surprised if Mark [Zuckerberg] would make such a big investment and then not do a full on reorg putting all AI efforts in one place.' Meta's sprawling AI kingdom includes the product-focused generative AI team, the AGI Foundations unit focused on further Llama development, as well as FAIR (Fundamental AI Research), which was founded by Yann LeCun, the AI 'godfather' who remains Meta's chief scientist. There is also a standalone Business AI product team helmed by former Salesforce AI head Clara Shih. That said, Wang would be an unorthodox choice for the top role, given that he is not a computer scientist. Whether the PhDs and other AI researchers working at Meta would accept Wang as their leader is hardly a sure thing. 'Nope,' one current Meta AI researcher said flatly. Wang is a businessman without a strong record working with AI models, the Meta researcher said. A former Meta AI researcher who worked in Meta's FAIR group concurred: 'He is not going to be accepted easily.' It's a warning Zuckerberg may well heed, given that Meta's research lab is already bleeding talent—11 of the original 14 Llama authors have left to join competitors. On the other hand, Wang's defenders point out that while not a computer scientist, he is more than capable of getting in the AI weeds. 'We forget sometimes he is a very technically-capable guy,' said the former Scale manager. 'He's not just a salesperson. He's incredible at it, but he's not just a salesperson.' With more than $164 billion in annual revenue, Meta knows all too well that it takes something truly unique to move the needle in its business. And in paying up for Wang and Scale, Zuckerberg is likely betting that the real value transcends any simple categories. One source close to Wang told Fortune that the surprise and confusion stems from the fact that Wang does not fit into the typical tech world archetypes. 'Silicon Valley is good at putting people into boxes, they like to say, this person is a technical person, this person is a business person,' he said. 'Alex is truly a man of one.' And that kind of asset is especially valuable as the landscape changes. If AI proves as game-changing as some expect, it will be far more consequential than any of the previous platform shifts that have rocked the tech industry, bringing hard-to-predict risks and opportunities. The advent of AI is already thawing the massive military contract market that Silicon Valley companies were once largely frozen out of, with Meta forging ties with drone-maker Anduril while rivals like OpenAI clinch Pentagon deals of their own. 'My very, very deep sense is that Meta is actively exploring, maybe even advanced in terms of actively exploring, wanting to play a significant leadership role in the national security of the United States,' said one former Department of Defense official. As Wang demonstrated at the Utah confab in 2023, and in Scale's full-page Washington Post ad in January ('Dear President Trump, America must win the AI War'), Meta's new investment is well-positioned on that front. It's also not gone unnoticed that Michael Kratsios, the Trump Administration's director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Science Advisor to the President, worked at Scale in between the two Trump terms. 'He's been very smart and extremely clever,' the former DoD official said about Wang. 'He seemed to lean into something that a lot of people have a little bit of a revulsion against, which is, engage in the politics of Washington. I think Alex, whether it's by generation or personality, or whatever, he really got that that needed to happen – he seemed to have a real sixth sense.' But while Meta could use all the help it can get in D.C. ('No one loves to hate anyone more than Washington loves to hate Zuckerberg; it's kind of a pastime for some people,' a beltway insider said), Wang will ultimately need to deliver more than the services of a lobbyist for the partnership with Zuckerberg to be successful. To Wang's fans, including one source who has known Wang for about a decade, his versatility will help Meta open doors and navigate whatever challenges lie ahead: 'He's better at the point of contact on any problem more than anyone I've ever seen.' Zoom out for a longer term view, and this person echoed a common sentiment, that Wang is just getting started. 'He may start another company, or maybe a bunch of companies,' the person said. 'Over time, he has a chance of being a main character in Silicon Valley at the highest levels for the next 30 years.' This story was originally featured on

Culinary-First Hotel Brand Appellation Joins Forces with Deepak Chopra to Open AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation
Culinary-First Hotel Brand Appellation Joins Forces with Deepak Chopra to Open AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation

Hospitality Net

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Hospitality Net

Culinary-First Hotel Brand Appellation Joins Forces with Deepak Chopra to Open AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation

Appellation, the groundbreaking culinary-first hotel brand by Michelin-starred chef Charlie Palmer and luxury hospitality veteran Christopher Hunsberger, joins forces with globally renowned wellness pioneer Deepak Chopra to create a transformative wellness destination community: AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation, set to debut in 2026. Blending culinary excellence with a transformative wellness experience, this strategic alliance is set to redefine standards of luxury retreats, while serving as an inviting sanctuary for the local community. Built around a natural geothermal spring used by humans for nearly five millennia, AMEYALLI is located on 78 acres of pristine landscape in the mountain town of Midway, Utah. With 28 natural hot springs and uninterrupted views of the snowcapped Wasatch Mountains. Appellation will manage and operate AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation, comprised of an 80-key hotel, a Charlie Palmer restaurant and bar, along with a state-of-the-art Wellbeing Center complete with expansive spa, luxury pool, and additional farm-to-table restaurant. The surrounding wellness development will also feature the AMEYALLI Center of Excellence in partnership with Deepak Chopra, as well as three types of private luxury residences. Appellation, distinguished by its culinary-first approach and dedication to imbuing each hotel with the essence of its local surroundings, will integrate seamlessly with AMEYALLI's carefully crafted aesthetic. Conceived by award-winning architecture firm Overland Partners, the resort's design will honor and celebrate the land and its storied heritage. AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation is built around a preserved granite dome, the highest point of the community, where generations of local dwellers and visitors journeyed to connect with the land's healing energy and breathtaking views. Design components, drawn from the geology of the site, will include a palette of materials and textures selected to provide an unmistakable sense of place and unity with its surroundings. Appellation is committed to delivering immersive and interactive culinary experiences that transcend traditional food and beverage venues at hotels. Key features include engaging lobbies designed as entertaining spaces and culinary centers, regular culinary demonstrations introducing guests to local makers, and more than 50 annual Crafted at Appellation hands-on learning programs with community artisans. AMEYALLI's 55-acre natural geological preserve and biodiverse garden will complement Appellation's goal of growing produce onsite, while also supporting local producers to source high-quality ingredients. Situated on the perimeter of Midway's idyllic village, AMEYALLI Park City by Appellation will be an ideal gateway for downtown strolls and a restaurant scene waiting to be discovered. The property is also located 10 minutes from the newly expanded Deer Valley Ski Resort, 20 minutes from Park City and less than an hour from both Salt Lake City and Provo airports. It is poised to become a premier destination for those seeking an extraordinary retreat in a setting of unparalleled natural beauty. Hotel website

Wealthy residents of stunning beauty spot outraged by plans to build giant WATER PARK next to their homes
Wealthy residents of stunning beauty spot outraged by plans to build giant WATER PARK next to their homes

Daily Mail​

time08-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Wealthy residents of stunning beauty spot outraged by plans to build giant WATER PARK next to their homes

Residents who live in a picturesque part of Utah have been left outraged that the owners of Splash Summit Water Park want to move its existing Provo location right on top of their prime real estate. The park currently sits a mile or so northwest from the Slate Canyon, where the company wants to move. Splash Summit reportedly wants to relocate there due to aging infrastructure and the size limitations of its current property. Specifically, the plan stipulates that the new park will take up 130 acres of city-owned land at the base of the canyon, which borders dozens of people's homes. Residents have come out in droves to say this will destroy the natural beauty of Slate Canyon, where many people go every day to get breathtaking views of the Wasatch mountains. The plan, which has not yet been formally submitted to the Provo City Council, would mean many homeowners will no longer get to marvel at snow-capped peaks when they step out into their backyards. Instead, they'd have brightly-colored slides, sprawling parking lots and retail space to look at. 'Where we are is so beautiful and to think of the natural beauty taken away from us is scary,' resident Quinton Parrish told ABC 4. Parrish also pointed out that there is a drainage basin at the bottom of Slate Canyon which he believes could be overwhelmed by all the concrete in the new park. This, he said, could create a scenario where dozens of homes are flooded by runoff and snow melt. Tyler Peterson, another resident, said he was excited about the new park but not too thrilled about the traffic it would undoubtedly bring to the area. Last week, the plan was first presented by the water park's project manager, Bryan Bayles, at a Neighborhood District 2 meeting, the Daily Herald reported. Well over 200 people showed up to hear out Bayles, who is insisting this won't just be a water park. There will be an expanded frisbee golf course, pickle ball courts and other amenities to appeal to a wider customer base, he said. 'We envision people coming to see the new entertainment options at Splash Summit, walking to the neighborhood retail, grabbing dinner,' Bayles said at the meeting. 'We envision a place where families and friends can gather to play pickleball or any other numerous enhanced outdoor activities. It's a place where kids will have something to do that is close to home, where they can come and be kids again,' he added. The city's comment period on the proposed park remains open, and residents were not shy before and after the meeting to make their thoughts known. 'Please, please preserve our beautiful Slate canyon! The road from the state hospital to Slate canyon is gorgeous, when all you can see is the mountainside and sky. This is a Provo treasure—please do not pollute it with retail, waterparks, hotels, billboards, and anything else. We don't need it. We DO need to be good stewards of our natural treasures,' Joanna Harmon wrote on May 7. One anonymous person opposed to the park said they have lived in Aspen Summit, a housing development on the border of Slate Canyon, for five years and described the proposal as 'such a disappointment for all Provo residents.' 'The idea of moving Splash Summit and further developing the last quiet, beautiful space around Slate Canyon runs contrary to all of the values I thought we Utahns stood for,' Jess Brown wrote on May 3, adding that the outdoors 'improves our mental health.' Others also showed concern about the area's ability to handle the increased traffic in the event this park were ever built. 'I live in the Slate Canyon neighborhood. I use the streets and the park and hike the trail on the mountainside regularly. Slate Canyon is not designed to handle that much traffic,' an anonymous resident wrote on May 1. Bayles appeared undeterred by the overwhelming backlash, defiantly stating that 'we could be proposing to build heaven right here in Provo and people would oppose it. Good solutions require compromise.' The park's developers still need to submit a formal application to the city, which means plans have not been reviewed and public hearings have not been scheduled.

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