
Meta commits $14 billion to Scale AI, kick-starting an in-house superintelligence lab, its boldest AI financing yet.
According to The New York Times and Scale AI’s official announcement, the partnership expands Meta’s access to AI data and infrastructure. The planned superintelligence lab will focus on building advanced AI systems, drawing on Scale AI’s capabilities while allowing the company to remain independent.
What Meta is actually paying for
Meta’s multibillion-dollar deal with Scale AI grants it access to critical infrastructure for training and testing large language models, along with data services that support model development, The New York Times reports. This aims to boost Meta’s AI division, which has struggled to keep pace with tech rivals.
The investment amounts to roughly 10% of Meta’s projected 2024 revenue and marks its first major minority stake in an outside company. It is also Meta’s second-largest deal on record, following the $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp in 2014.
As part of the arrangement, Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang will join Meta to support its AI efforts while retaining a seat on Scale’s board. Jason Droege, previously Scale’s chief strategy officer, has been named interim CEO.
Mounting rival pressure drives Zuckerberg’s superintelligence ambitions
Meta’s superintelligence lab initiative was developed amid rising competition from OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and Anthropic. The new division will take on the company’s most advanced AI work, with a focus on building systems capable of far greater complexity than its current models.
Frustrated by uneven results from earlier projects, including limited enthusiasm for Llama 4, CEO Mark Zuckerberg is leading the effort himself. The lab’s goal is to create AI systems designed to perform tasks that typically require human-level reasoning, marking a clear escalation in Meta’s research priorities.
The possible tradeoffs behind the partnership
Meta’s investment has stirred unease among Scale’s existing clients. According to Forbes, OpenAI began scaling back its relationship with the company months ago and has been reviewing other vendors. One former Scale employee said, “They all want to cut Scale off now. Scale as a business, once it becomes part of Meta, entirely collapses.” Scale later denied any change in OpenAI’s spending.
Rivals are moving in. Mercor CEO Brendan Foody reported a spike in demand from clients leaving Scale. Invisible Technologies emphasized its independence, while Turing, a data supplier to multiple large firms, described the deal as an opportunity to gain ground.
The outcome, for now, tells two different stories. For Meta, the deal is strategic; for Scale, it could be existential.
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