Meta is cutting roughly 600 jobs from its AI division, affecting teams including FAIR (Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research), AI infrastructure, and product-related AI positions, though the company is still hiring for its newer superintelligence lab.
The cuts were announced by Alexandr Wang, Meta's chief AI officer, who joined the company after Meta invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI earlier this year.
This comes just one day after Meta announced a $27 billion deal with Blue Owl Capital to fund its massive Hyperion data center in Louisiana, during a period when Meta expects total expenses for 2025 to reach $114-118 billion, with AI initiatives driving even higher growth in 2026.
The company is explicitly continuing to hire for its superintelligence division while cutting from other areas. This appears to be about consolidating efforts rather than retreating.
Wang's memo stated the goal is to reduce layers so "fewer conversations will be required to make a decision, and each person will be more load-bearing and have more scope".
mosbyllc•2h ago
Meta's AI division cuts feels like a classic case of corporate reshuffling—painful for those affected but strategically predictable. I find it interesting how they're doubling down on superintelligence while trimming other AI teams, which really shows where they're betting their future. That $27B data center deal right before these layoffs makes me wonder about the realignment of resources—are they choosing brute-force computing power over diversified research?
delaminator•3h ago
The cuts were announced by Alexandr Wang, Meta's chief AI officer, who joined the company after Meta invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI earlier this year.
This comes just one day after Meta announced a $27 billion deal with Blue Owl Capital to fund its massive Hyperion data center in Louisiana, during a period when Meta expects total expenses for 2025 to reach $114-118 billion, with AI initiatives driving even higher growth in 2026.
The company is explicitly continuing to hire for its superintelligence division while cutting from other areas. This appears to be about consolidating efforts rather than retreating.
Wang's memo stated the goal is to reduce layers so "fewer conversations will be required to make a decision, and each person will be more load-bearing and have more scope".