Meta has been secretly relying on Google's AI for customer service, ad tools, and content moderation – then got cut off

midian182

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WTF?! Few companies seem less likely to run out of AI capacity than Google and Meta, but even the industry's biggest names can hit a token wall. The search giant has reportedly limited the Facebook owner's use of Gemini after demand for AI capacity grew beyond what it could supply.

According to the Financial Times, Google warned Meta around March that it could not provide all the capacity the company wanted, disrupting and delaying internal AI projects.

The restrictions are still said to be in place. Meta has reportedly told employees to be more careful with AI tokens, the units used to measure model input, output, and usage. That's quite the change of tone for a company that has spent the past year pushing – and in some cases forcing – staff to use AI as much as possible.

Meta has spent billions building its own Llama family of open models, while Mark Zuckerberg has been pitching AI as the company's next defining platform, one Meta will hope does not go the same way as its metaverse bet.

But people familiar with the arrangement told the FT that Meta had been using Google's Gemini models for customer service, advertiser chatbots, coding, harmful content takedowns, and scam detection. Gemini was reportedly chosen because it performed better than Meta's own models. Anthropic's Claude is also said to be in the mix.

The shortage didn't hit only Meta; other Google customers were also affected, though less severely. Meta appears to have been the outlier because of the amount of Gemini capacity it wanted to buy.

The reliance is not entirely surprising. Meta doesn't operate a cloud business of its own, unlike Google, Microsoft, or Amazon, leaving it to balance its internal AI systems with outside capacity from the same companies it competes against.

Google has been spending heavily on data centers and AI hardware, but demand is still arriving faster than capacity can be built. Google Cloud revenue passed $20 billion in Alphabet's most recent quarter, while backlog nearly doubled to more than $460 billion. The company also said its first-party models were processing more than 16 billion tokens per minute through direct API use, up 60% from the previous quarter.

Meta is trying to solve the same problem, but from the other direction. It's been expanding data centers and working with Broadcom on custom MTIA accelerators as it looks to rely less on rivals.

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I had an interesting interaction with Meta AI where it "got angry" with me because I wasn't giving it appropriate directions
 
AI keeps getting more interesting by the day. The Chinese sucking away and using USA AI for semi-nefarious purposes and IP theft and now Meta with a questionable use of other's AI. No wonder they're building out DCs so feverously. It seems to me that the biggest user of AI will be AI itself!!

We're headed toward the next model where you type in a query and it tells you the estimated price before committing to answer the question. You'll sit just watch your token meter go down as you press AI for answers. Then Governments will figure out how to tax that and they'll too steal your money too with every query. The AI rabbit hole runs very, very deep.
 
Meta must be one of the worst run companies. It pains me to realize how many people still use Facebook and the love for Instagram. The fact that this dumpster fire of a company is worth $1.43 trillion in market capitalization; the world just feels broken some days.
 
I'm trying to find out how this was considered 'secret'? Google was billing them for usage so they knew who was using the data because Meta's name was on the letters that they sent the bills to, and they likely were using millions of dollars worth of tokens, so it wouldn't be a mystery or secret at all.
 
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