Zuckerberg's Meta signs 24yr old AI engineer to $250 million 4 year contract

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Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta gave a 24-year-old artificial intelligence whiz a staggering $250 million compensation package, raising the bar in the recruiting wars for top talent — while also raising questions about economic inequality in an AI-dominated future.

Matt Deitke, who recently dropped out of a computer science doctoral program at the University of Washington, initially turned down Zuckerberg’s “low-ball” offer of approximately $125 million over four years, according to the New York Times.

Sigh, I guess if sportsball players can make insane money then the nerd end of the spectrum can too.
I assume this deal may have included his previously developed company and related IP as well. The guy already had a multimillion dollar venture.
 

Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta gave a 24-year-old artificial intelligence whiz a staggering $250 million compensation package, raising the bar in the recruiting wars for top talent — while also raising questions about economic inequality in an AI-dominated future.

Matt Deitke, who recently dropped out of a computer science doctoral program at the University of Washington, initially turned down Zuckerberg’s “low-ball” offer of approximately $125 million over four years, according to the New York Times.

Sigh, I guess if sportsball players can make insane money then the nerd end of the spectrum can too.
I assume this deal may have included his previously developed company and related IP as well. The guy already had a multimillion dollar venture.
President Barack Obama. He actively promoted computer science education, including encouraging young people to learn how to code, as part of his administration's initiatives.
 

Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta gave a 24-year-old artificial intelligence whiz a staggering $250 million compensation package, raising the bar in the recruiting wars for top talent — while also raising questions about economic inequality in an AI-dominated future.

Matt Deitke, who recently dropped out of a computer science doctoral program at the University of Washington, initially turned down Zuckerberg’s “low-ball” offer of approximately $125 million over four years, according to the New York Times.

Sigh, I guess if sportsball players can make insane money then the nerd end of the spectrum can too.
I assume this deal may have included his previously developed company and related IP as well. The guy already had a multimillion dollar venture.
What does zukerberg need the human engineer for when his AI slave works for free?

Arent we humans supposed to be obsolete?
 
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