One day after Meta deployed its AI AI autonomous application, Mark Zuckerberg shared more on how the company possibly plans to monetize its AI generator assistant. When calling the company’s first quarter of the first quarter, Zuckerberg said Meta IA could one day display advertisements and product recommendations. He also referred to plans for a subscription component for those who want a more “premium” version of the assistant.
“I think there will be a great opportunity to show recommendations or product announcements, as well as a premium service for people who wish to unlock more calculation for additional features or intelligences,” said Zuckerberg.
He has added that for the moment the company focuses more on the growth in the use of Meta AI. (He announced yesterday that Meta Ai had reached “a” 1 billion monthly users “almost”.) “I expect that we are largely focused on scaling and deepening the engagement for at least next year before we are really ready to start developing the company here,” he said.
Zuckerberg’s comments – One day after Meta presented its AI autonomous application – stresses how important the assistant is for the company. The Facebook founder said on several occasions that he wanted Meta Ai to be the most used AI assistant in the world, and he said that Wednesday, an autonomous application would be particularly important to attract American users.
Meta’s strategy to monetize the assistant in many ways reflects his approach to the sons, who just begins his first experiences with advertisements this month long after reaching hundreds of millions of users. Speaking of threads, Zuckerberg has also shared new steps for threads, saying that the textual application now has 350 million monthly active users and that the time spent on the platform has increased by 35% in the last six months thanks to improvements in the company’s recommendation systems.
Later in the call, Meta’s financial director Susan Li shared that the company also tested its Lama model to the recommendations of food threads and that the addition of the large language model has led to a 4% increase in the time spent. “It remains early here, but this year will be a big goal on exploring how we can deploy it for other types of content, including photos and videos,” she said.
This article originally appeared on engadget to