French publishers and authors are taking Meta to court, accusing the social media company of using their works without ...
Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, is testing its first in-house chip designed to train artificial intelligence (AI) systems, according to sources cited by Reuters.
The push to develop in-house chips is part of a long-term plan at Meta to bring down its mammoth infrastructure costs as the company places expensive bets on AI tools to drive growth. Meta ...
Meta has formally expanded Meta AI to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), opening the AI-enabled chatbot to millions more people. Back in October, Meta announced it was launching Meta AI in ...
Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) is doubling down on AI, rolling out Meta AI with Arabic support across the Middle East and North Africa. Users in Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Libya, Morocco ...
Instead of being in complete control of the process, Meta wants advertisers to focus more on signing checks and letting artificial intelligence (AI) do the driving. The AI tools in question do ...
Authors think that Meta's admitted torrenting of a pirated books data set used to train its AI models is evidence enough to win their copyright fight—which previously hinged on a court ruling ...
Meta is reportedly readying its first in-house AI training chip for deployment The dedicated AI accelerator, made with TSMC, completed tape-out Meta’s shift to custom silicon aims to reduce its ...
Meta is testing its first AI training chip to cut Nvidia reliance and lower infrastructure costs tied to its AI push. Meta tapped TSMC to build its training chips, with plans to deploy them widely ...
Many companies are already ramping up their developments for their in-house technology, and the next that reportedly joined this trend is Meta as it is now testing its self-made AI training chip.
A hot potato: Meta is embroiled in a groundbreaking AI lawsuit that could change how courts view copyright law. The case seems open-and-shut from the plaintiffs' view. However, if a judge sees ...