Mark Zuckerberg · Engadget
Zuckerberg did, however, hire the founders of Moltbook, a briefly viral (and probably overhyped ) forum for AI agents
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It will likely be some time before Engadget see any of Meta's planned agentic capabilities.
Key facts
- Meta may have been laying some groundwork for this with its recent move to allow creators to tag up to 30 products in a video
- Last week during Meta's earnings, Mark Zuckerberg said that the company is working on new AI agents for people and businesses on the company's platform
- Speaking during a follow-up call with analysts last week, CFO Susan Li said that the Ray-Ban Meta glasses "provide what we believe is the best form factor for agentic interactions," though she
- Zuckerberg did, however, hire the founders of Moltbook, a briefly viral (and probably overhyped ) forum for AI agents
Summary
Last week during Meta's earnings, Mark Zuckerberg said that the company is working on new AI agents for people and businesses on the company's platform. The publication reports that Meta is working on an "OpenClaw-inspired" agent currently dubbed "Hatch. Separately, Meta also apparently intends for Hatch to help the company compete with TikTok Shop. The report doesn't go into exactly how the agent will work with services Meta doesn't own, but Zuckerberg is clearly interested in AI agents as a way to bolster his " superintelligence " ambitions. Incidentally, Meta also reportedly tried to hire the creator of OpenClaw, the open-source AI agent platform that went extremely viral in AI circles at the start of this year.