Today, Explained - $250 million to work for Meta

Episode Date: August 28, 2025

Meta Mark is going all-out to put his superintelligence lab on superdrive. What is superintelligence, you ask? This episode was produced by Gabrielle Berbey with help from Denise Guerra, edited by Mi...randa Kennedy, fact checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Andrea Kristinsdottir and Matthew Billy, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Listen to Today, Explained ad-free by becoming a Vox Member: vox.com/members. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast. Mark Zuckerberg, head of Meta, showing off a prototype of computer glasses. Photo by Andrej Sokolow/picture alliance via Getty Images. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 How much would Mark Zuckerberg have to pay you for you to want to go work for him over at META? Maybe it's your dream job, so let's say just like 100K. Maybe you hate Mark with every fiber of your being, so you'd ask for like 10 million. But if you could sell him on your superintelligence, he might offer you $250 million. Superintelligence was something that could invent a fusion reactor that humans didn't even understand, figure out how to do faster than light travel. And so people here in Silicon Valley started to get really excited and started to spend a lot of money on designing ever more capable artificial intelligence.
Starting point is 00:00:41 A personal superintelligence that helps you achieve your goals, create what you want to see in the world, be a better friend, and grow to become the person that you aspire to be. We're going to explain super intelligence and why Meta Mark will offer you the moon to help him build it on today Explain from Box. Support comes from ServiceNow. We're for people doing the fulfilling work they actually want to do. That's why this ad was written and read by a real person and not AI.
Starting point is 00:01:09 You know what people don't want to do? Boring, busy work. Now with AI agents built into the ServiceNow platform, you can automate millions of repetitive tasks in every corner of your business, IT, HR, and more so your people can focus on the work that they want to do. That's putting AI agents to work for people. It's your turn. Visit servicenow.com.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Support for this show comes from OnePassword. If you're an IT or security pro, managing devices, identities, and applications can feel overwhelming and risky. Trellica by OnePassword helps conquer SaaS sprawl and Shadow IT by discovering every app your team uses, managed or not. Take the first step to better security for your team. Learn more at OnePassword.com slash podcast offer. That's OnePassword.com slash podcast offer, all lowercase. This is Today Explained. My name is Riley Griffin, and I am a tech reporter with Bloomberg News.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Okay, Riley, you write about Silicon Valley and it's various companies for Bloomberg. The Silicon Valley company we want to talk about today is Meta, specifically Meta's new super-intelligence lab. How new is it? What is it? What are they trying to do? Yeah, the superintelligence lab is incredibly new. And really what I want to say here is that the story of META's superintelligence lab is at its core a story of competition. So you've got Mark Zuckerberg, a famously competitive CEO. And this past spring, we learned through our reporting that he'd begun to feel quite acutely that meta was falling behind in this all-consumption. race for AI.
Starting point is 00:03:02 Meta had basically just released the latest version of its large language model. They call it Lama. Hey, everyone, it is Lama 4-Day. Our goal is to build the world's leading AI, open-source it, and make it universally accessible so that everyone in the world benefits. I'm really excited about, you know, all the unlocks that we're going to get from Lama 3 and then Lama 4 and then Lama 5, and I think that's going to translate into better products. All right, welcome everybody to LamaCon.
Starting point is 00:03:28 This is a system meant to rival OpenAI's ChatGPT or Anthropics Claude. But when the rollout landed, it fell flat. Lama 4 just dropped, and it's been an absolute disaster. Lama 4 is lost. And it fell flat internally, according to our sources. It had just become clear that META was not leading the pack among these AI companies. Our listeners may think of META as the parent company of Facebook. or Instagram or WhatsApp, you know, these popular apps that have billions of users.
Starting point is 00:04:04 But Meta's increasingly seeing itself as an AI company too. And it wasn't leading there. And so Zuckerberg, seeing, feeling that he was falling behind in this race, immediately sprung into action from his homes in Tahoe and Silicon Valley. He started personally recruiting. $200 million to work at Meta. That is what we understand. Mark Zuckerberg is currently offering to join his.
Starting point is 00:04:28 his superintelligence team. Meta has extended offers worth as much as $300 million to more than 10 of Open AIs top researchers. And he was basically quietly building this new secretive team that we now know is Meta's super intelligence labs. Okay, what is this super secretive team going to do? I thought Meta was like all about the Metaverse and that's why they changed their name to Meta. I am proud to announce that starting today, our company is now meta. It sounds like they should have changed the name to AI.
Starting point is 00:05:08 To AI, meta AI. It's a really good point. I think when I speak with folks on Wall Street, the metaverse is always the pain point, if you will. It is something that still bleeds cash. It's not a big revenue driver. It hasn't proved itself to be. be the dream that Mark Zuckerberg once painted. Back in the days where it was still called Facebook outright,
Starting point is 00:05:35 you know, they were in the AI game. They founded this Facebook AI research lab, now called the Fundamental AI Research Lab. They actually brought in this guy named Yan Lacoon. There is no question, absolutely no question, that at some point in the future, we'll have AI systems that are as smart as humans in all the domains where humans are smart,
Starting point is 00:05:56 But maybe will be as smart as human, if not significantly smarter in all domains where human are smart. A big thinker, award-winning thinker on some of these things. And so, you know, if you were watching that at the time, you might have thought META was really well positioned to be the AI leader. But when OpenAI came out with ChatGBT, BT, it blew everyone out of the water, including AI researchers at Meta, who I've spoken with. You know, they'd been building their own large language model. But the approach was still rather academic. It wasn't packaged in a consumer product in the way Open AI so successfully executed on ChatGBTBT. And when I speak to folks who were at Meta at the time, they just, they believed already OpenAI had gotten ahead and was taking a more deft approach to consumer strategy.
Starting point is 00:06:51 So I think that's when the race began, but it really kicked into gear this April. with what felt to many internally at Meta as a flop with its latest release of Lama. And what exactly has Meta done in this space so far? Nothing, it sounds like? Right now, we're seeing a talent war. We're seeing Meta create a new organizational structure for its AI talent. So this is a multi-billion dollar effort, and Meta has the cash to deploy here. The perspective of company leadership
Starting point is 00:07:25 is that they're looking to make a big bet and plug that talent gap. So Zuckerberg is pledging to spend not a couple billion, but hundreds of billions of dollars on their broader AI strategy and the infrastructure needed to support it. And yet, they believe
Starting point is 00:07:41 there's only a small talent pool that can best make use of that spend to put together these competitive models. Many are focused on reasoning, and that means they're specialists who can help build models that think step by step as opposed to in this probabilistic approach where they're predicting the next word in the sentence. Because a lot of the chatbots right now, they look like they understand what
Starting point is 00:08:07 you're saying when you type in a question. But really, they're just predicting. They've taken these massive amounts of data and they're able to predict the next word in the sentence. And what meta, what Open AI want to do is really give them the capacity to think, to reason for themselves, to get to that answer. So if you're going to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to win the AI race, what's a couple billion on the talent that can steer the ship? But of course there's pushback. I will say that pushback isn't coming from Wall Street.
Starting point is 00:08:40 I mean, meta stock is up nearly 30% this year to date. Clearly, there's excitement from the investor community at every given announcement on deploying cash to purchase companies, to hire talent, to build out data center, more cash will be spent. One thing I've heard from folks who have left meta over the years is that if you are a Ph.D. type who got into this really complicated question of AI reasoning and superintelligence,
Starting point is 00:09:13 you weren't necessarily inspired when Meta announced that they were creating AI chatbots, you know, that sounded like Snoop Dog. That's a really different kind of product. You love puzzles and games? So do we. That's why we got Snoop Dog as Dungeon Master. Your quest begins now, player. And so there has been skepticism of Mark Zuckerberg as a leader.
Starting point is 00:09:37 He's someone who really wants to bring AI into the hands of individuals. And, you know, these folks who've departed meta over the years point to the company as one that's flip-flopped on its AI strategy. and I think it's too early to tell whether or not it's working. What has been successful is Mark's efforts to court some of the biggest names out there. So they are taking away top talent from competitors, but we also know there are people who have turned down Mark Zuckerberg's sports team-level compensation packages. So it sounds like meta is restructuring itself or creating altogether new structures to play the long game here on Super Intelligence.
Starting point is 00:10:21 What does it look like in the rest of the industry right now? Everybody, I mean everybody, has had to respond to Mark Zuckerberg's crazed hiring push. His efforts have set a new bar for compensation across the industry. We've seen other companies like OpenAI have to make offers to their own employees to keep them that are much higher. You know, a rising tide lifts all ships, and there is no doubt that the way that they have aggressively hired and thrown cash at the problem has left other companies having to catch up. And you're even seeing that in the language, the public posturing from CEOs, Open AI has come out and said that they're going to spend trillions on the AI race. You know, other companies are being quite loud about the money they're going to throw. But we're talking about the biggest players here, Sean.
Starting point is 00:11:18 We're not talking about the upstarts that have just gotten some venture cash. Meta, Google, even Open AI are in a different position because they have cash to burn. Read Riley Griffin at Bloomberg.com. Listen to us, ask if Mark is wasting his money on superintelligence when today explains. Reign Returns. Support for today explained comes from constant contact. There are a few ways you could handle marketing your business. You could grab a giant microphone.
Starting point is 00:12:08 I have a regular size one in front of me right now. You go to a local mall, miss the mall, and start screaming until mall security shows up. Or you can check out Constant Contact because they have better ideas than the mall one. Constant Contact says their marketing platform is here to make marketing easier and more effective for small businesses the best part. They say you don't need to know anything about marketing. With their all-in-one platform, you can create and manage attention grabbing campaigns in just a few clicks, email, text, social media, events, landing pages, you name it, it's all in one place. And with the help of their AI tool, which they say helps you turn a rough idea into a ready-to-go message fast, there is no more juggling dozens of different apps.
Starting point is 00:12:47 You also get automated sending, real-time reporting, and tools that actually help drive sales. You can get a free 30-day trial when you go to constantcontact.com. Try constant contact free for 30 days at constantcontact.com. Constantcontact.com. Support for this show comes from one password.
Starting point is 00:13:09 If you're an IT or security pro, managing devices, identities, and applications can feel overwhelming and risky. Trellica by OnePassword helps conquer SaaS sprawl and Shadow IT by discovering every app your team uses, managed or not. Take the first step to better security for your team. Learn more at OnePassword.com slash podcast offer.
Starting point is 00:13:34 That's OnePassword.com slash podcast offer, all lowercase. Support for this show comes from Indeed. So you need to hire someone and you need to hire them fast. But how can you find amazing candidates when time is not on your side? Easy. Just use Indeed. With Indeed, you can stop struggling to get your job post seen on other job sites. Indeed's sponsored jobs help you stand out and hire fast. With sponsored jobs, your post jumps to the top of the page for your relevant candidates
Starting point is 00:14:08 so you can reach the people you want faster. And it makes a huge difference. According to Indie Data, sponsored jobs posted. directly on Indeed have 45% more applications than non-sponsored jobs. Join the 3.5 million employers worldwide that use Indeed to hire great talent fast. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed. And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at indeed.com slash vox business. Just go to indeed.com slash vox business right now and
Starting point is 00:14:42 support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com slash box business. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, Indeed is all you need. Cool. Today explained. Garrett DeVink writes about tech for the Washington Post, and we asked him here to help us wrap our heads around this one big, beautiful word,
Starting point is 00:15:08 super intelligence. You sort of see it pop up here and there. I mean, there's different terms, ultra-intelligence, superhuman intelligence. I think the actual word superintelligence was used by Nick Bostrom. Cures for aging,
Starting point is 00:15:25 space colonization, self-replicating nanobots or uploading of minds into computers, all kinds of science fictionist stuff that's nevertheless consistent with the loss of physics. All of this and superintelligence could develop
Starting point is 00:15:38 and possibly quite rapidly. It was this technologist and sort of futurist who spent a lot of time writing and talking and inspiring people about the singularity and the future when brains meld with machines and we become infinite beings. Once there is superintelligence, the fate of humanity may depend on what the superintelligence does. Machine intelligence is the last invention that humanity will ever need to make.
Starting point is 00:16:03 A lot of people who have been working on AI over the last decade have made their goal to invent a superintelligence, something that is smarter, than humans. And it does bleed into marketing. It is about getting people along. But it's also something that a lot of people actually believe and they think it's coming. What all the AI companies are aiming to build is digital super intelligence. So, you know, intelligence that's far smarter than any human. And then ultimately, an intelligence that is far smarter than all humans combined. Some people argue, oh, well, we already have artificial general intelligence.
Starting point is 00:16:43 That's what ChatGPT is. Look at all the cool things they can do. Other people say, don't be ridiculous. It's making all these mistakes. It's just a random number generator that we've trained to do cool tricks. That's kind of where the AGI debate is. And so I think people have now glommed onto the term superintelligence because it is something that we can all kind of agree.
Starting point is 00:17:05 We're not there yet. We don't have some kind of Oracle in a box that is inventing new forms of science that we don't understand yet. And so we can kind of say that's what's coming and give people an idea and a vision to work towards. Even if it could be decades away. Yeah. And I think here in Silicon Valley, there's very few people who are out there saying it's decades away, right? I mean, that's where they were a few years ago before some of the breakthroughs that trigger chat GPT and some of these other AI products that we're all dealing with and talking about right now.
Starting point is 00:17:41 But most people here in Silicon Valley in the tech industry have rapidly moved up their timelines for when they think we will invent a machine that can do things that humans don't understand that can go beyond us. Developing superintelligence is now in sight. At meta, we believe in putting the power of superintelligence in people's hands to direct it towards what they value in their own lives. So you have people saying 2026, 2027, 2028, 2030, and they do kind of, you know, there were a few 2025. We're in 2025 now and the 2025 people are saying 2026 now. So I do think there is a bit of an effect of, you know, there's definitely a lot of optimists here. But that's sort of definitely a big change in how people who work on AI think about the capabilities and how quickly they might be approaching. We recently did like a two-part series on Mars on this program. And it's funny because that is reminding me of Mars, where Elon Musk was saying, like, probably got about a 50% chance of sending ships from Earth to Mars at the end of next year. So November, December, next year, in about 18 months. Wow.
Starting point is 00:18:49 And it's just absolute pie in the highest of skies. Does anyone who's promising superintelligence in the next few years, or even this year, it's August, by the way. Do any of them have any idea what this thing's going to look like? You're starting to see people get the questions exactly like that. Like, what are you talking about? This is science fiction. Like, you have no evidence that this is coming, that it's happening. Just because something is advancing relatively quickly or faster than you would expect,
Starting point is 00:19:20 it doesn't mean that that's going to continue, right? They're sort of extrapolating into the future without knowing for sure that that's going to happen or even presenting a strong explanation for how it might happen. And so those people in the tech industry, I mean, we're talking about, you know, leaders at OpenAI, at Anthropic and Google, also people who spend a lot of time researching AI and how it might affect society and the economy have obviously been getting these questions. And so they're starting to refine their answers a little bit. And I think one that is quite interesting and has taken hold is the CEO of Anthropic AI.
Starting point is 00:19:54 This is a, you know, very, very prominent, well-funded AI company here in San Francisco, Dario Amadai, the CEO, he started talking about a nation of geniuses. In terms of pure intelligence, it is smarter than a Nobel Prize winner across most relevant fields, biology, programming, math, engineering, writing, etc. Each of these million copies can act independently on unrelated tasks, or, if needed, can all work together in the same way humans would collaborate. We could summarize this as a country of geniuses in a data center. And they are going to invent these scientific breakthroughs,
Starting point is 00:20:38 or we'll give them complex engineering problems, or even societal problems will say, hey, how do we ensure that democracy stays strong into the 21st century? Those are the kinds of more concrete yet still very vague ideas that people are starting to articulate. Is there anyone saying this is a crock, it's not going to happen? Is there anyone saying, you guys just made this thing up because it sounds good and it raises money? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:21:10 And I think there's a very strong argument that that's all it is. I mean, if you look at the last decade, 15 years of Silicon Valley, obviously you think about meta, Facebook, and all the same people who built these companies are now building these AI products and trying to find ways. to convince people that we need them, that we need to use them, that we need to work them into our daily lives. And yes, that we need to spend money every month in order to continue to access them. And so the other element, too, is if you have people talking about science fiction and AI is coming to destroy humanity, you don't have them talking about racial bias being baked into AI. You don't have them talking about how AI is being used to make it easier for the government to surveil citizens. And so I think there is a
Starting point is 00:21:59 strong argument that a lot of this is about marketing, is about hype, is about distraction, really. And there are definitely people who are articulating that argument, who are saying there's a big bubble. These companies are way too overvalued. They're not actually delivering on what they're claiming. They're all going to blow up and the stock market is going to go with it. And I do think that the truth probably lies somewhere in between. I mean, living here in San Francisco, it might be hard to sort of really understand from the outside, but there are people who truly, truly believe in their heart of hearts, almost in a religious way that super intelligence is coming and that it's our job as humanity to prepare ourselves for it.
Starting point is 00:22:40 And in the meantime, we peons get like GPT5. Yeah, I think GPT5 is a really interesting story that reveals a lot about where the technology industry is right now. And so GPT5 is the latest version of OpenAI's technology. It's sort of the software that goes behind ChatGPT, and a lot of people were really expecting that GPT5 would blow everyone away, that it would solve a lot of the problems that AI has. You might have heard about hallucinations. That's when AI just makes something up randomly and acts really confident that it's true when it isn't. People said, oh, GPT5, hallucinations won't really be a problem anymore. And when it actually came out, it was better at most of those things, but it wasn't a huge leap in the way that people were expecting.
Starting point is 00:23:31 And I think that huge hype cycle, all that energy and all those claims by companies like Open AI really fed this expectation amongst people who are interested in AI, our early adopters, that it was going to be the next big thing, and all the skeptics and naysayers would be proven wrong. And when it came out, it's not like it was worse, but it definitely wasn't superintelligence. And so you see a lot of soul searching going on after GPT-5s launched. If you're just, you know, a person who occasionally uses chat GPT to, like, plan a trip or, I don't know, write a speech at a wedding, which I've heard over and over that people are doing, you know, like, how should a regular person who uses tech casually to, like, help their life be a little more efficient, be thinking about superintelligence? or should they not be thinking about superintelligence at all? I think the first way that people should think about it is with skepticism.
Starting point is 00:24:29 They should see it as a marketing term. They should understand what these tech companies are doing. And I think beyond that, if, you know, if you care about superintelligence, you care about AI, I mean, it's an interesting thing to think about. There's a reason people are drawn to this because science fiction, we have all these ideas from literature. from film that are very exciting and interesting. And I do think it's fun to kind of engage with these questions.
Starting point is 00:24:58 It's kind of cool to live in the future. I think especially as a tech reporter, we were writing about how bad technology was and social media was destroying society. We sort of spent a lot of years, and that was the big story. And now the big story is, yes, there's a cynical, skeptical approach,
Starting point is 00:25:16 which is tech companies are trying to sell something that we might not even need. But at the same time, the technology is advancing. It can definitely do things that we couldn't do just a couple years ago. And we sort of see the future unfolding in front of us a little bit. And so I don't think there's any harm in being excited about that and looking forward to ways that technology might make our lives better,
Starting point is 00:25:37 as long as people are aware of some of the motivations and incentives behind the things that the companies are saying. That was Garrett DeVink from Washington Post.com. He spells it G-E-R-R-I-T. How do you spell it? Our episode was mixed by Andrea Christen's daughter and Matthew Billy, edited by Miranda Kennedy and fact-checked by today explained senior researcher, Laura Bullard.
Starting point is 00:26:11 It was produced by Gabrielle Burbe, who was off to pursue her Bay Area dream, not to work for Meta Mark, but to be a bona fide reporter. Happy Trails Gabby. Those who remain are Patrick Boyd, Rebecca Ibarra, Avishai Artsy, Miles Bryan, Peter Ballin-Rosen, Devin Schwartz, Hadi Mawagdi, and Denise Guerra, who helped out with today's show. Danielle Hewitt joined the team this week.
Starting point is 00:26:33 Welcome, Danielle. Noel King has been here for years. Amon Al-Assadi's been here even longer, and Jolie Myers isn't thinking about the news this week. Or maybe she is. It's hard to say. We use music by Breakmaster Cylinder. I'm Sean Ramos from today.
Starting point is 00:26:45 Today, Explain is distributed by WNYC. The show is a part of the Vox Media podcast. network, you can find many more of our shows at Podcasts.voxmedia.com. What if traveling for business was a pleasure? With ample space for every size meeting or conference, on-site AV support, and an experienced team dedicated to providing excellent service, the Hilton Anatole is the premier business travel destination in Dallas.
Starting point is 00:27:46 And when the workday is done, enjoy signature. dining at Sear, Steak, and Spirits and the resort-style Jade Waters Pool Complex. Hilton. For the stay, book your next business trip in the Dallas area at Hiltonanatole.com.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.