In the race to make truly useful AI for a mass audience, Meta just jumped forward a few key steps — including AI’s ability to “see” objects and provide live, lip-synched translations.
At the Meta Connect developers’ conference, CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled the latest version of Llama. That’s the open-source Large Language Model (LLM) powering the AI chatbot in the company’s main services: Facebook, WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram.
Given that reach, Zuckerberg described Meta AI as “the most-used AI assistant in the world, probably,” with about 500 million active users. The service won’t be available in the European Union yet, given that Meta hasn’t joined the EU’s AI pact, but Zuckerberg said he remains “eternally optimistic that we can figure that out.”
He’s also optimistic that the open-source Llama — a contrast to Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s GPT, both proprietary closed systems — will become the industry standard. “Open source is the most cost-effective and the most customizable,” …