A representative from Thinking Machines Lab confirmed to the publication that the researcher decided to “take a different path for personal reasons.”
In August, the media began to write that Mark Zuckerberg was actively trying to attract specialists in the field of artificial intelligence, then news appeared about the possible acquisition of Thinking Machines Lab. When the deal fell through, Zuckerberg allegedly offered Tulloch a compensation package worth $1.5 billion over six years. Meta* later denied these data, calling them “inaccurate and absurd.” And now he works there.
Andrew Tulloch previously worked at OpenAI and Facebook AI Research*.
*Belongs to Meta, who is recognized as an extremist and banned in the Russian Federation
Source: Ferra

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