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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.

OpenAI’s Valuation Soars to $500 Billion After Major Share Sale Involving SoftBank

OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, has achieved a staggering $500 billion valuation after employees and former staff sold $6.6 billion worth of shares to major global investors, according to a source cited by Reuters. This marks a sharp rise from its previous valuation of $300 billion, signaling the company’s explosive growth in both user base and revenue.

The deal involved sales to a powerful consortium of investors, including Thrive Capital, SoftBank, Dragoneer Investment Group, Abu Dhabi’s MGX, and T. Rowe Price. The company reportedly authorized the sale of more than $10 billion in stock on the secondary market, giving early employees and stakeholders the chance to cash out part of their holdings while maintaining OpenAI’s momentum in private financing rounds.

SoftBank, already a participant in OpenAI’s $40 billion primary funding round, has further strengthened its position with this deal. None of the involved firms immediately commented on the transaction.

Financially, OpenAI continues to outperform expectations. The company brought in around $4.3 billion in revenue during the first half of 2025, which is roughly 16% higher than its total revenue for the entirety of 2024, according to The Information.

The timing of this sale coincides with intensifying competition among global tech giants for AI talent and infrastructure dominance. Meta, for instance, is heavily investing in AI companies like Scale AI, and recently hired its 28-year-old CEO, Alexandr Wang, to spearhead its new superintelligence division—a move highlighting the escalating arms race in artificial intelligence innovation and expertise.

As OpenAI’s valuation hits half a trillion dollars, the company stands at the center of this rapidly transforming landscape—its technology, partnerships, and pace of growth redefining the frontier of modern computing.

Meta Superintelligence Labs Raids Silicon Valley for AI Talent Amid Competitive Surge

Meta Platforms is escalating the AI talent war by aggressively recruiting top researchers and engineers for its newly formed Superintelligence Labs, aiming to close the gap with leading AI firms like OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic, and rising Chinese rival DeepSeek.

The initiative follows a lukewarm response to Meta’s LLaMA 4 model and a string of senior staff exits. Now, under Mark Zuckerberg’s direction, Meta is attempting to reposition itself at the forefront of the generative AI revolution by poaching a wave of elite talent from competitors.

Notably, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently claimed that Meta was offering bonuses of up to $100 million to lure away his top employees.

Major Recruits to Meta’s AI Division

Here’s a rundown of the high-profile AI experts who have recently joined Meta’s Superintelligence Labs:

  • Alexandr Wang: Former Scale AI CEO and now Meta’s Chief AI Officer. Wang will oversee the entire Superintelligence initiative. Meta previously invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI.

  • Nat Friedman: Former GitHub CEO and co-founder of VC firm NFDG. He joins as co-lead of Superintelligence Labs, overseeing applied research and product direction.

  • Daniel Gross: Co-founder of Safe Superintelligence and another NFDG partner, now leading Meta’s AI product division.

  • Ruoming Pang: Former head of Apple’s Foundation Models team, he joined Meta with a multi-million-dollar compensation package.

  • Trapit Bansal: An OpenAI researcher who helped develop the influential “o-series” models. He previously worked alongside Ilya Sutskever.

  • Shuchao Bi: Formerly with YouTube and Google, and most recently OpenAI, Bi played a critical role in Google Ads and co-founded YouTube Shorts.

  • Huiwen Chang: Co-creator of GPT-4o at OpenAI and inventor of MaskGIT and Muse during her time at Google Research.

  • Ji Lin: Previously built multimodal reasoning systems and Operator stack at OpenAI.

  • Joel Pobar: Formerly with Anthropic, where he managed inference pipelines, and previously spent over a decade at Meta.

  • Jack Rae: Technical lead at Google DeepMind, he was a key figure behind the Gemini 2.5 reasoning capabilities.

  • Hongyu Ren: Helped develop GPT‑4o and several o-series models at OpenAI. Specialized in post-training strategies.

  • Johan Schalkwyk: A former Google Fellow, Schalkwyk joins Meta as Voice Lead, bringing deep speech AI experience.

  • Pei Sun: Previously at Google DeepMind, where he worked on Gemini post-training and coding; also a former key player in Waymo’s perception team.

  • Jiahui Yu: Co-creator of o3, o4-mini, GPT-4.1, and GPT-4o at OpenAI. Previously led a perception team at an AI startup.

  • Shengjia Zhao: A veteran OpenAI researcher, co-creator of ChatGPT, GPT-4, and multiple mini and o-series models.

Context and Strategic Implications

Meta’s aggressive recruitment comes as open-source alternatives lose steam and proprietary models from rivals dominate benchmarks and investor sentiment. The newly formed Superintelligence Labs aims to integrate core research, infrastructure, and applied AI product teams under one roof.

Zuckerberg’s strategy appears to blend cutting-edge foundational model development with AI-driven product innovation, positioning Meta to rival OpenAI’s GPT line, Anthropic’s Claude, and Google’s Gemini models not just in capability, but also in speed-to-market.

With billions of dollars invested and Silicon Valley’s top minds onboard, Meta is setting the stage for a renewed offensive in the AI arms race.