Report: Meta to release commercial AI tools to rival Google, OpenAI

Sources close to Meta reportedly have said the company plans to make a commercial version of its AI model to be more widely available and customizable.

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Meta plans to release a commercial version of its artificial intelligence (AI) model aiming to reach wider usage according to a Financial Times report.

The report contained details from sources close to Meta who said that although the company already released its own language model called LLaMa for researchers and academics earlier this year, the new version will be more widely available and can be customized by companies.

This comes as Meta tries to position itself to be competitive with Microsoft-backed OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, and Google who are current leaders in the space.

FT’s source, reported to have knowledge of high-level strategy at Meta, said:

“The goal is to diminish the current dominance of OpenAI.”

With the commercial version of LLaMa, start-ups and businesses will be able to build custom software and applications on top of Meta’s underlying AI technology.

At the moment all of Meta’s models are free and open-source though two of FT’s sources said the company has been exploring a paid version for enterprise customers. However, it would not be a part of the upcoming release.

The release of the commercial version is expected “imminently,” says the FT sources close to the situation.

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Moreover, Meta has made its LLM models open-source which means the details of the system's operations are publicly available. This is not the case with its competition like OpenAI, which keeps its code private to third parties.

FT’s source close to Meta said:

“Meta realized they were behind on the current AI hype cycle, and this gives them a way to open up the ecosystem and seem like they are doing the right thing, being charitable and giving back to the community.”

Cointelegraph reached out to Meta for additional comments on the development and its strategy. 

These dvelopements come as Meta faces a lawsuit from author Sarah Silverman, along with two other authors on behalf of a class of copyright owners across the United States alleging that Meta has committed copyright infringement while training its AI systems. 

OpenAI has been hit with a similar class-action lawsuit th alleges the company has committed data theft in the training of its models. 

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