Meta cuts 600 AI jobs amid ongoing reorganization
In Brief
Posted:

Meta’s chief AI officer, Alexandr Wang, wrote in a memo to staff on Wednesday that the company will cut about 600 jobs from its superintelligence lab, according to a report from Axios.
Meta declined to comment, but told TechCrunch that Axios’ reporting is accurate.
As Meta, OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and other companies race to build the most powerful AI systems, Meta had a busy summer on the hiring front. The company poached more than 50 researchers from its competitors by offering multimillion-dollar pay packages, though OpenAI CEO Sam Altman claimed that “none of [OpenAI’s] best people” took the offers.
“By reducing the size of our team, fewer conversations will be required to make a decision, and each person will be more load-bearing and have more scope and impact,” Wang wrote in the memo to staff.
This line of thinking tracks with Meta’s recent “year of efficiency” — a more sanitized way to describe the company’s mass layoffs. At the time, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told staff that “leaner is better.”
Now, it seems that Meta isn’t lowering its overall headcount by much, but rather, reorganizing its efforts. The company claims that most of these people impacted today should be able to find another job within Meta.
Subscribe for the industry’s biggest tech news
Latest in AI
Latest TechCrunch
- Redwood Materials raises another $350M to power up its energy storage businessThe round was led by Eclipse and saw participation from Nvidia's venture capital arm, NVentures.
- As China’s 996 culture spreads, South Korea’s tech sector grapples with 52-hour limitSouth Korea's 52-hour workweek cap is stricter than the U.S. and Singapore but more flexible than much of Europe. Still deep tech founders and investors worry it's too restrictive.
- Elon Musk frets over controlling Tesla’s ‘robot army’ as car biz rebounds slightlyTesla's profit actually fell 37% compared to the same period last year, despite buyers rushing to take advantage of the expiring EV tax credit.
- Snapchat makes its first open prompt AI Lens available for free in the USSnapchat is expanding access to its AI-powered “Imagine Lens,” allowing all users to generate and edit images with custom prompts for free.
- Why Cohere’s ex-AI research lead is betting against the scaling raceCohere's former VP of AI research, Sara Hooker, is launching a new startup to build AI models that can adapt to their environment.
- OpenAI requested memorial attendee list in ChatGPT suicide lawsuitThe new information comes as the Raines family updated its lawsuit against OpenAI. The family first filed a wrongful death suit against OpenAI in August after alleging their son had taken his own life following conversations with the chatbot about his mental health and suicidal ideation.