Zuckerberg says he feels 'weight' of Meta layoffs


In addition to the cuts, Meta said in April it would cancel plans to hire 6,000 people and shift 7,000 other employees into AI workflow-related roles. — AFP

NEW YORK: Meta began laying off roughly 8,000 employees Wednesday – about 10 percent of its global workforce – as co-founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg pushes to redirect resources toward an ambitious artificial intelligence agenda.

According to Bloomberg, notifications went out beginning in the early morning hours, with Singapore-based workers among the first to be informed.

In addition to the cuts, Meta said in April it would cancel plans to hire 6,000 people and shift 7,000 other employees into AI workflow-related roles.

In a memo to staff Wednesday, posted by Business Insider, Zuckerberg expressed thanks to departing employees and sought to reassure those remaining.

"It's always sad to say good-bye to people who have contributed to our mission and to building this company," he wrote. "I feel the weight of that."

Zuckerberg said he did not expect additional company-wide layoffs this year, and acknowledged the company had fallen short in its communications with staff.

He struck an optimistic tone about the company's direction, saying Meta was "one of the few companies positioned to help define the future" and reaffirming his goal of delivering "personal superintelligence" to users worldwide.

The restructuring is the largest company-wide round of cuts since Zuckerberg's 2022-2023 "Year of Efficiency" campaign, which eliminated roughly 21,000 positions.

The move comes as Meta dramatically ramps up spending on AI infrastructure.

Meta has forecasted capital expenditures to reach between US$125bil (RM495.32bil) and US$145bil (RM574.58bil) for the year – more than double the company's 2025 outlay. – AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Tokyo Electron's Taiwan unit says it will not appeal ruling in TSMC trade secrets case
US advocacy groups seek FTC probe into Roblox for kid spending
SpaceX aims for 10,000 annual launches within five years, FAA says
Samsung Electronics' shares jump after tentative wage deal suspends strike
Anthropic nears first quarterly profit, agrees to pay SpaceX $1.25 billion monthly for computing power
Elon Musk's X loses Australia child protection compliance lawsuit
TikTok, YouTube lag on UK child safety as rivals act, regulator says
Microsoft warns of 'critical' security flaw in Authenticator app
Trump to sign order on AI oversight as security fears mount among supporters
Instant View: SpaceX files long awaited IPO, creating a fresh AI play

Others Also Read