

Meta Platforms has acquired Assured Robot Intelligence, a New York-and San Diego-based startup specializing in AI for humanoid robots. The move will support CEO Mark Zuckerberg's plan to focus on robotics and superintelligence. At the same time, Meta aims to cut 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its staff, in the next few weeks. Many wonder if the company’s new goals are being funded at the cost of its employees' livelihoods.
The deal brings founders Lerrel Pinto and Xiaolong Wang into the fold at Meta Superintelligence Labs. Their team is known for developing AI that helps robots understand and adapt to human movement in real-world settings. Meta wants to build a foundational platform for the robotics industry, like how Android works for phones. By developing both the software and hardware, the tech giant hopes to lead the market alongside rivals like Tesla, Amazon, and Google.
To fund these goals, Meta has raised its spending forecast for this year to $125 billion to $145 billion. Zuckerberg recently told employees in a leaked meeting that the surge in computing and infrastructure costs means the company needs to shrink its headcount.
The CEO noted that AI makes teams more efficient. A job that once needed 100 people might now only need 10. While this helps the company stay competitive, it creates immediate job losses for thousands of workers.
Investors are showing concern over this heavy spending. Meta’s stock fell over 9% this week, closing at $608.75. Despite the market dip, the firm continues to launch new tools, such as Muse Spark language model, to take on OpenAI and Google. The company is clearly moving away from its old Metaverse vision. It is now focusing completely on an AI-driven future where humanoid robots play a central role.
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Meta’s shift shows a cold truth about the AI era; innovation comes at the cost of human roles. Humanoid robots and superintelligence could change the world. However, the 8,000 workers whose jobs would be lost will pay the price for that vision. Zuckerberg is betting the company on being the ‘Android of Robotics,’ a high-risk move that may take years to pay off.