Athira Sethu
Kochi, 21 August 2025
Meta, the parent firm of Facebook and Instagram, has suspended recruitment within its artificial intelligence (AI) unit. The company referred to the decision as part of a “basic restructuring” exercise. This follows months of aggressive recruitment that CEO Mark Zuckerberg referred to as the “AI Superteam.”
Meta recently hired over 50 researchers and engineers, according to a report published by the Wall Street Journal. But from last week, the company froze hiring and also prevented employees from transferring between different AI groups. It has not disclosed the duration for which it will continue the hiring freeze.
A Meta spokesperson assured that the halt is not an indication of issues but instead “organisational planning.” The firm wishes to establish a robust framework for its AI projects, particularly after hiring so many new employees. This is the fourth significant restructuring in six months.
According to the new framework, the AI department will be divided into four departments:
1. TBD Lab – developing superintelligence.
2. Consumer AI – building AI products for the masses.
3. AI Infrastructure – building the AI systems and tools.
4. Fundamental AI Research – working on long-term projects.
Zuckerberg’s long-term objective is to create AI systems which would even be smarter than humans. In an effort to cement this agenda, Meta has onboarded big names like Alexandr Wang (Scale AI), Nat Friedman (previous GitHub CEO), and Daniel Gross (Safe Superintelligence). Meta would also fund some of their businesses, according to reports.
In recent months, Meta has poached the best talent available from competitors such as OpenAI, Google, Apple, xAI, and Anthropic. Some media outlets reported that Meta had made offers worth as much as $300 million, though Meta has refuted those amounts.
This hiring binge has been costly. Meta spent $17 billion in capital spending alone during the second quarter of 2025 and increased its annual expenditure guide to up to $72 billion. While the fiscal performance of the company has been robust, most analysts are concerned about the long-term expense of making such large investments.
Industry insiders are being careful too. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman just stated that investors may be “overexcited” over AI, cautioning that a bubble in the industry is possible.
Meta’s halt for the time being is an indicator of introspection—streamlining its rapidly growing AI unit while remaining committed to its ambitious vision of developing the next generation of intelligence