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Meta to Cut 600 Jobs in Superintelligence Labs as AI Unit Restructures

Meta announced plans to cut approximately 600 positions within its Superintelligence Labs division, part of a restructuring aimed at making the company’s artificial intelligence operations more agile and efficient. The layoffs will impact teams across Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research (FAIR), product-related AI, and AI infrastructure, according to the company.

Meta said affected employees are encouraged to apply for other internal roles. However, the newly created TBD Lab — a smaller group of researchers and engineers developing next-generation foundation models — will remain untouched. Chief AI Officer Alexandr Wang emphasized that the reduction in staff would streamline decision-making and increase each member’s scope and influence.

The reorganization follows a period of leadership turnover and mixed reception to Meta’s Llama 4 open-source model. The company recently consolidated all AI initiatives under the Superintelligence Labs umbrella to accelerate progress in foundational and applied AI research.

Separately, Meta secured a $27 billion financing agreement with Blue Owl Capital to fund its largest data center project to date. Analysts say the deal could help Meta advance its massive AI infrastructure plans while mitigating financial risks.

TomTom beats expectations as auto sector sales rebound

Dutch navigation and digital mapping company TomTom reported quarterly earnings far exceeding expectations, driven by a recovery in automotive demand and tighter cost management. The company posted an operating profit of 8.4 million euros in the third quarter, sharply higher than analysts’ consensus of 2 million euros and a marked improvement from the 4.1 million euro loss recorded a year earlier.

Following the announcement, TomTom’s shares surged over 7% in early Amsterdam trading. CEO and co-founder Harold Goddijn attributed the strong results to a mix of growing automotive revenues and cost discipline, highlighting that process standardization across customer operating systems has increased efficiency and predictability.

In June, TomTom announced plans to cut 300 jobs as part of an AI-driven restructuring strategy aimed at streamlining operations. The firm’s automotive location technology unit, its largest division, was the only one to post revenue growth — a 2% increase — as global carmakers step up investment in navigation and self-driving technologies.

Despite lingering uncertainty in the car market, Goddijn noted a renewed appetite for automation among manufacturers in Japan, China, Europe, and the United States. While its consumer GPS products continue to see slowing demand, TomTom’s app remains profitable, supporting the development of its high-definition maps and connected driving systems.

OpenAI to Halve Revenue Share with Microsoft Amid Restructuring, Report Says

OpenAI plans to significantly reduce the share of its revenue allocated to Microsoft by the end of the decade, as part of its ongoing corporate restructuring, according to a report by The Information on Tuesday. The AI firm reportedly informed investors that its revenue-sharing deal with Microsoft—currently 20% through 2030could fall to 10% or less over the next several years.

The shift comes amid broader changes at OpenAI, which recently abandoned plans for a full conversion into a public benefit corporation (PBC) and reaffirmed nonprofit control, limiting CEO Sam Altman’s power while trying to balance mission-driven governance with commercial scalability.

The financial update shared with investors suggests a future where OpenAI is less dependent on Microsoft while still maintaining a collaborative relationship. In response to the report, OpenAI noted it is finalizing the details of this recapitalization”, and said it continues to work closely with Microsoft. However, Microsoft declined to comment.

In January, Microsoft adjusted key terms of its deal with OpenAI, following its joint venture with Oracle and SoftBank to invest up to $500 billion in U.S.-based AI data centersa move that signaled deeper integration of AI infrastructure beyond OpenAI’s models alone.

The current OpenAI–Microsoft partnership includes reciprocal revenue sharing agreements, access to OpenAI’s models on Microsoft’s Azure platform, and embedded use of ChatGPT within Microsoft’s enterprise software like Office and Azure AI services.

Microsoft, which has invested over $13 billion in OpenAI, is believed to be negotiating for continued access to OpenAI’s technology post-2030, as competition intensifies in the global AI race.