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Japan’s TDK Acquires U.S. Smart Glasses Company SoftEye

Japanese electronics manufacturer TDK announced on Thursday it has acquired SoftEye, a U.S.-based company specializing in software and hardware for smart glasses. This acquisition supports TDK’s strategy to find new growth drivers linked to artificial intelligence (AI).

SoftEye, headquartered in San Diego, California, develops eye-tracking and object recognition technologies. Its founder and CEO, Te-Won Lee, has previously held executive roles at Samsung Electronics and Qualcomm.

According to a source familiar with the deal, the acquisition is valued at under $100 million.

Tech companies are increasingly investing in hardware beyond smartphones, with smart glasses gaining attention. Facebook owner Meta and others are focusing on AI-powered smart glasses to enhance user interaction with their environment. Social media company Snap plans to launch consumer smart glasses next year, and Alphabet’s Google recently showcased smart glasses at its developer conference. Chipmaker Qualcomm also unveiled a smart glasses processor this month.

TDK, once famous for its cassette tapes, now plays a key role in electronics by supplying components and batteries for smart glasses.

Sam Altman Reveals Meta Offered $100 Million Bonuses to Lure OpenAI Talent

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman disclosed that Meta has made massive $100 million bonus offers to some OpenAI employees as part of its aggressive strategy to build out its artificial intelligence capabilities. Speaking on the Uncapped podcast, Altman said Meta is trying to recruit top AI engineers with exceptionally large signing bonuses and compensation packages.

Despite the lucrative offers, Altman noted that none of OpenAI’s key talent have yet accepted Meta’s proposals. The move underscores the intense competition among tech giants to secure leading AI researchers amid a booming AI race.

Meta, which recently invested $14.3 billion in AI data-labeling firm Scale AI and hired its CEO Alexandr Wang to lead a new superintelligence unit, is looking to catch up with rivals like OpenAI and Google. The company has faced challenges including staff departures and delays in releasing open-source AI models.

Altman added that Meta views OpenAI as its “biggest competitor” in the AI space. Reuters could not independently verify the bonus claims and Meta has not commented.

Meta’s $14.8 Billion Scale AI Deal Raises Regulatory Questions Amid AI Partnership Scrutiny

Meta’s $14.8 billion investment in data-labeling startup Scale AI, along with hiring its CEO, poses a test of the Trump administration’s stance on so-called “acquihire” deals—arrangements that some critics argue are used to bypass antitrust scrutiny.

The deal, announced Thursday, gives Meta a 49% nonvoting stake in Scale AI, which employs gig workers to manually label data and serves major clients including Meta’s rivals Microsoft and OpenAI. Because Meta does not gain a controlling stake, the transaction avoids mandatory U.S. antitrust review. Still, regulators could investigate if they suspect the deal was structured to sidestep rules or harm competition.

The structure aims to prevent Meta from cutting off competitors’ access to Scale’s services or gaining undue insight into rival operations. Despite this, Reuters reported that Alphabet’s Google has decided to sever ties with Scale following Meta’s investment, while other customers are reconsidering their relationships.

Scale AI stated its business remains strong and that it is committed to protecting customer data. Scale’s 28-year-old CEO Alexandr Wang will join Meta as part of the deal but will remain on Scale’s board with restricted access to sensitive information.

Experts say that while the Trump administration’s antitrust enforcers are cautious of big tech platforms, they generally want to avoid overregulating AI development. William Kovacic, competition law expert at George Washington University, noted regulators will watch these partnerships closely but might not intervene if they do not stifle competition.

Previous FTC inquiries into “acquihire” deals under the Biden administration—including Amazon’s hiring from AI startup Adept and Microsoft’s $650 million deal with Inflection AI—have so far resulted in no enforcement action.

Boston College Law professor David Olson highlighted Meta’s choice of a minority, nonvoting stake as a legal shield, though he acknowledged the FTC could still seek to review the deal.

The investment has drawn criticism from U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, who called for scrutiny to ensure Meta does not unlawfully suppress competition or increase monopoly power. Meta is already facing an FTC monopoly lawsuit, but whether regulators will challenge this specific investment remains unclear.

Separately, the U.S. Department of Justice’s antitrust division is probing whether Google’s partnership with chatbot maker Character.AI was structured to evade regulatory review and is seeking advance notice of Google’s AI investments as part of broader efforts to rein in the company’s dominance.