By integrating Mattis' agent platform, Meta aims to accelerate AI‑driven automation of remote work, a move that could reshape labor economics and sharpen the company's competitive edge in the AI race.
Meta's acquisition of Mattis AI signals a strategic push into autonomous AI agents that function as remote workers, highlighting a notable shift in Meta's AI roadmap away from pure open‑source commitments.
Mattis built each agent on its own Ubuntu virtual machine, driven by interchangeable large language models, and achieved state‑of‑the‑art performance on the Remote Labor Index benchmark at roughly 2.5% task completion while generating $100 million in annual recurring revenue within eight months.
The video showcases complex tasks—3D product renders, architectural plans, video‑game prototypes, and interactive dashboards—demonstrating the agents' capabilities, yet current models still fall far short of human baselines (ELO scores around 400‑500 versus 1,000 for humans).
The acquisition underscores Meta's pivot from open‑source leadership to building proprietary AI infrastructure, suggesting an accelerated development of agent technology that could disrupt low‑skill remote labor markets and sharpen Meta's position in the AI race.
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