Mira Murati's team refuses offers of up to $1 billion per individual from Mark Zuckerberg

An unusual encounter at the peak of the race for the best talent in the field of artificial intelligence. The Founding Machines Lab founder - COTO OF OpenAI, Mira Murati, has confirmed to Wired magazine that none of its team has accepted Mark Zuckerberg's billion-euro offer to join the laboratory [...]
The Founding Machines Lab founder - COTO OF OpenAI, Mira Murati, has confirmed to Wired magazine that none of its team has accepted Mark Zuckerberg's billion-euro bid to join Meta's new laboratory, called “Superintelligence Lab”
According to the report, Meta tried to recruit members of the Murati team by offering compensations from $200m to $1 billion per individual -- figures that rocked the industry. But, Murati claims that: <x0) So far, no person from the Thinking Machines Lab has accepted the” bid, underlining the team's determination to preserve independence.
Meta, on the other hand, has denied this version of the events. spokesperson Andy Stone told Wired that the company had made offers for only a limited number of people and added that the reported financial details are inaccurate. At the end of the day, the question remains: Who's creating this gear and why?”, Stone said. Thinking Machines Lab, launched by Murati, has provided financing worth over a billion dollars without launching a product, becoming one of the most widely pursued companies in the AI sector.
Sources from the industry say Murati's long-term vision and strong direction are the reason the team remains united, despite unreceptive offers from the largest technological corporations.
Experts point out that researchers in this laboratory choose to work free from the restrictions of giant structures in order to build the future of artificial intelligence from scratch. /Periscope/












