Mark Zuckerberg admitted to weaknesses in the company's restructuring during an internal town hall. The AI agents Meta reorganized around are progressing slower than planned, Zuckerberg said. His AI chief, meanwhile, painted a rosier picture.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledged at an internal town hall on Thursday that the systems known as AI agents haven't advanced as fast as expected, according to an audio recording obtained by Reuters. The corporate restructuring didn't go as "clean" as it could have, he said, and executives misjudged the timing.
The "trajectory of the agentic development over at least the last four months hasn't really accelerated in the way that we expected," Reuters quoted Zuckerberg as saying. The bets on the new structure "haven't come to fruition yet."
The admission carries real weight. Zuckerberg spent the past year going all in on catching up in AI. He put Alexandr Wang in charge of the AI division, rebranded it as Meta Superintelligence Labs, and offered top talent nine-figure sums to lure them away from rivals. In April, the company released Muse Spark, the first model in a new lineup. It posted solid benchmark scores but didn't match OpenAI or Anthropic.










