Meta is recording every employee click to train AI
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The new model is competitive with rival AI models, according to data from Meta, but won’t be widely available outside Meta’s own product ecosystem.
Meta will watch its staff to train its artificial intelligence systems for the workplace, according to a new report. The tracking software will capture employees’ mouse movements, clicks and keystrokes and use them to train new AI systems,
Meta debuted its first major large language model, Muse Spark, spearheaded by chief AI officer Alexandr Wang, who leads Meta Superintelligence Labs.
Meta's Muse Spark is the first AI model from the company's new Superintelligence Labs.
Meta on Wednesday announced its first major model since CEO Mark Zuckerberg rebooted the company’s AI efforts last year under a new division called Meta Intelligence Labs. The model, called Muse Spark, is a step toward Zuckerberg’s vision of “personal superintelligence,” the company says, and for now, it will remain closed source.
After releasing its first major AI model in a year called Muse Spark, Meta now has to figure out how to turn it into a business.
Meta will train its agentic AI models to work more efficiently by tracking its employees' keyboard strokes and mouse movements; some have privacy concerns.
Muse Spark, as what Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) is calling its much-anticipated closed-source model, which used to go by the codename Avocado. Undoubtedly, it’s an interesting name, and the release seems to have come at the right time,
Meta Platforms Inc. debuted its latest artificial intelligence model Wednesday — its first since Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg embarked on a multibillion-dollar overhaul of the company’s AI organization to keep pace with rivals.
Meta Superintelligence Labs' first model, Muse Spark, is now here to provide reasoning capabilities for Meta AI.
By Katie Paul and Aditya Soni April 8 (Reuters) - Meta Platforms on Wednesday unveiled Muse Spark, the first artificial intelligence model from a costly team it assembled last year to catch up with rivals in the AI race.