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Meta to cut 10,000 more jobs in latest round of layoffs for Facebook parent
Meta Platforms Inc. plans to lay off 10,000 more employees as it focuses on a “year of efficiency.” The Facebook parent company announced its latest round of layoffs in a Tuesday morning note to employees that was also posted on the company’s corporate blog. In November, Meta announced plans to slash more than 11,000 in an initial round of cuts. Meta shares were up more than 6% in late-morning trading Tuesday. “With less hiring, I’ve made the difficult decision to further reduce the size of our recruiting team,” Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said in Tuesday’s announcement. The company plans to inform recruitment team members about their status tomorrow and will announce the impact on tech and business teams in April and May, respectively.
A current Meta employee said he was bracing for the worst in the spring, when his division goes through cuts, adding to the uncertainty and fear gripping parts of the company. Zuckerberg noted that Meta would also close about 5,000 additional roles that the company has yet to hire for. “After restructuring, we plan to lift hiring and transfer freezes in each group,” he said. Meta’s deeper cuts were initially praised on Wall Street, which is looking for bloated tech companies to rein in costs. “The Year of Efficiency is becoming more efficient,” Evercore ISI analyst Mark Mahaney wrote Tuesday in a note that raised Meta’s price target to $305 from $275. “With the new, lowered expense guidance, META is declaring that it can recover to growth with de minimis growth in expenses.”
Meta disclosed in its latest 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had 86,482 employees as of the end of 2022, though it also said that the “reported head count includes a substantial majority” of the 11,000 employees who were affected by the first round of layoffs. Meta expected those employees to no longer be reflected in its head count by the end of the first quarter. Technology companies including Meta went on massive hiring sprees during the height of the pandemic as the stay-home economy roared. But advertising spending has slowed since then, and Wall Street wants companies to be more disciplined with their costs. Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Microsoft Corp., Salesforce Inc., and Zoom Video Communications Inc. are also shedding tens of thousands of jobs.
Meta initially planned to push forward with aggressive expense plans for this year, but the company’s spendthrift ways didn’t sit well with investors last fall, prompting Zuckerberg to pivot and announce the November wave of job cuts. Since then, he’s espoused discipline even further, dubbing 2023 Meta’s year of efficiency in the company’s latest earnings materials. The company has already lowered its 2023 expense forecast multiple times and did so again Tuesday. Meta disclosed in a filing with the SEC that it now expects to incur $86 billion to $92 billion in total expenses this year, whereas its prior forecast was for $89 billion to $95 billion. Prior to the first round of layoffs, Meta had been expecting $96 billion to $101 billion in total expenses for 2023. Still, Meta continues to pour billions of dollars into developing virtual reality and augmented reality technologies essential to creating its vaunted metaverse. Meta’s Reality Labs division tasked with creating the metaverse lost about $13.7 billion in 2022 on $2.16 billion of revenue. MarketWatch
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Nigeria–China tech deal to boost jobs, skills, local opportunities
A new technology transfer agreement between the Nigeria–China Strategic Partnership (NCSP) and the Presidential Implementation Committee on Technology Transfer (PICTT) is expected to open more job opportunities, improve local skills, and expand access to advanced technology for ordinary Nigerians.
In a press statement reaching Vanguard on Friday, the MoU aims to strengthen industrial development, support local content, and create clearer pathways for Nigerians to benefit from China’s growing investments in the country.
PICTT Chairman, Dr Dahiru Mohammed, said the partnership will immediately begin coordinated programmes that support local participation in infrastructure and industrial projects.
Special Adviser to the President on Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr John Uwajumogu, said the deal will help attract high value investments that can stimulate job creation and strengthen Nigeria’s economy.
NCSP Head of International Relations, Ms Judy Melifonwu, highlighted that Nigerians stand to gain from expanded STEM scholarships, technical training, access to modern technology, and collaboration across key sectors including steel, agriculture, automobile parks, and cultural industries.
The NCSP Director-General reaffirmed the organisation’s commitment to measurable results, noting that the partnership with PICTT will prioritise initiatives that deliver direct national impact.
The MoU signals a new phase of Nigeria–China cooperation focused on practical delivery, local content, and opportunities that improve everyday livelihoods.
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EU hits Meta with antitrust probe over plans to block AI rivals from WhatsApp
EU regulators launched an antitrust investigation into Meta Platforms on Thursday over its rollout of artificial intelligence features in its WhatsApp messenger that would block rivals, hardening Europe’s already tough stance on Big Tech. The move, reported earlier by Reuters and the Financial Times, is the latest action by European Union regulators against large technology firms such as Amazon and Alphabet’s Google as the bloc seeks to balance support for the sector with efforts to curb its expanding influence.
Europe’s tough stance – a marked contrast to more lenient U.S. regulation – has sparked an industry pushback, particularly by U.S. tech titans, and led to criticism from the administration of U. S. President Donald Trump. The European Commission said that the investigation will look into Meta’s new policy that would limit other AI providers’ access to WhatsApp, a potential boost for its own Meta AI system integrated into the platform earlier this year.
EU antitrust chief Teresa Ribera said the move was to prevent dominant firms from “abusing their power to crowd out innovative competitors”. She added interim measures could be imposed to block Meta’s new WhatsApp AI policy rollout. “AI markets are booming in Europe and beyond,” she said. This is why we are investigating if Meta’s new policy might be illegal under competition rules, and whether we should act quickly to prevent any possible irreparable harm to competition in the AI space.”
A WhatsApp spokesperson called the claims “baseless”, adding that the emergence of chatbots on its platforms had put a “strain on our systems that they were not designed to support”, a reference to AI systems from other providers. “Still, the AI space is highly competitive and people have access to the services of their choice in any number of ways, including app stores, search engines, email services, partnership integrations, and operating systems.” The EU was the first in the world to establish a comprehensive legal framework for AI, setting out guardrails for AI systems and rules for certain high-risk applications in the AI Act.
Meta AI, a chatbot and virtual assistant, has been built into WhatsApp’s interface across European markets since March. The Commission said a new policy fully applicable from January 15, 2026, may block competing AI providers from reaching customers via the platform. Ribera said the probe came on the back of complaints from small AI developers about the WhatsApp policy. The Interaction Company of California, which has developed AI assistant Poke.com, has taken its grievance to the EU competition enforcer. Spanish AI startup Luzia has also talked to the Commission, a person with knowledge of the matter said.
Marvin von Hagen, co-founder and CEO of The Interaction Company of California, said if Meta was allowed to roll out its new policy, “millions of European consumers will be deprived of the possibility of enjoying new and innovative AI assistants”. Meta also risks a fine of as much as 10% of its global annual turnover if found guilty of breaching EU antitrust rules.
Italy’s antitrust watchdog opened a parallel investigation in July into allegations that Meta leveraged its market power by integrating an AI tool into WhatsApp, expanding the probe in November to examine whether Meta further abused its dominance by blocking rival AI chatbots from the messaging platform. The antitrust probe is a more traditional means of investigation than the EU’s Digital Markets Act, the bloc’s landmark legislation currently used to scrutinize Amazon’s and Microsoft’s cloud services for potential curbs. Reuters
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Billionaires are inheriting record levels of wealth, UBS report finds
The spouses and children of billionaires inherited more wealth in 2025 than in any previous year since reporting began in 2015, according to UBS’s Billionaire Ambitions Report published on Thursday. In the 12 months to April, 91 people became billionaires through inheritance, collectively receiving $298 billion, up more than a third from 2024, the Swiss bank said. “These heirs are proof of a multi-year wealth transfer that’s intensifying,” UBS executive Benjamin Cavalli said.
The report is based on a survey of some of UBS’s super-rich clients and a database that tracks the wealth of billionaires across 47 markets in all world regions. At least $5.9 trillion will be inherited by billionaire children over the next 15 years, the bank calculates.
Most of this inheritance growth is set to take place in the United States, with India, France, Germany and Switzerland next on the list, UBS estimated. However, billionaires are highly mobile, especially younger ones, which could change that picture, it added. The search for a better quality of life, geopolitical concerns and tax considerations are driving decisions to relocate, according to the report.
In Switzerland, where $206 billion will be inherited over the next 15 years according to the bank, voters on Sunday overwhelmingly rejected 50 per cent tax on inherited fortunes of $62 million or more, after critics said it could trigger an exodus of wealthy people.
Switzerland, the UAE, the U.S. and Singapore are among billionaires’ preferred destinations, UBS’s Cavalli said. “In Switzerland, Sunday’s vote may have helped to increase the country’s appeal again,” he said. Reuters
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