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Meta is installing new tracking software on computers used by its employees based in the U.S. The software aims to capture mouse movements, clicks, and keystrokes. This data will be used to train Meta’s artificial intelligence models, as part of an initiative to build AI agents capable of performing work tasks autonomously.


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Credit: UNSPLASH

The tool, called Model Capability Initiative (MCI), will operate on work-related applications and websites. It will also take occasional snapshots of screen content, according to an internal memo. This memo was posted by a staff AI research scientist within the company's model-building Meta SuperIntelligence Labs team.


The stated purpose is to improve the company's AI models. The models currently struggle to replicate human computer interaction, especially with tasks like choosing from dropdown menus, and using keyboard shortcuts.


An internal memo noted, "This is where all Meta employees can help our models get better simply by doing their daily work."


Meta, owner of Facebook and Instagram, is actively integrating AI into its workflows and restructuring its workforce around the technology. The company believes this will lead to more efficient operations.


Meta Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth informed employees in a separate memo that internal data collection would increase. This is part of "AI for Work" efforts, now known as Agent Transformation Accelerator (ATA).


Bosworth stated, “The vision we are building towards is one where our agents primarily do the work and our role is to direct, review and help them improve." He added that the aim was for agents to "automatically see where we felt the need to intervene so they can be better next time.”


Bosworth did not explicitly detail the training methods for these agents. However, he affirmed that Meta would be “rigorous” in “building up data and evals for all the types of interactions we have as we go about our work.”


Meta spokesperson Andy Stone confirmed that MCI data would serve as one of the inputs for this training.


Stone specified that MCI data would not be used for performance assessments or any other purpose apart from model training. He also noted that safeguards are in place to protect "sensitive content," without further elaboration on which types of data would be excluded.


Stone explained, "If we're building agents to help people complete everyday tasks using computers, our models need real examples of how people actually use them — things like mouse movements, clicking buttons, and navigating dropdown menus."


The move to automate functions previously performed by human staff reflects a broader trend among major U.S. companies this year. This pattern is particularly evident within the technology sector.


AI tools have garnered significant attention in Silicon Valley for their ability to handle complex tasks. These include creating applications and organising large volumes of data with limited human oversight. This has led to a selloff in traditional software company stocks and prompted some executives to plan extensive job cuts.


Meta plans to lay off 10% of its global workforce starting on May 20. The company is also considering additional large cuts later this year.


Amazon.com has similarly reduced its corporate workforce by 30,000 employees in recent months, representing nearly 10% of its white-collar staff. Additionally, the fintech company Block chopped nearly half of its staff in February.


Internally, Meta has encouraged staffers to use AI agents for coding and other tasks, even if it causes short-term delays. The company has also removed distinctions between certain job functions, favouring a new general-purpose job title called “AI builder.”


Meta created a new Applied AI (AAI) engineering team last month. This team aims to enhance the coding capabilities of Meta’s AI models and use them to develop AI agents. These agents will perform the majority of the work to build, test, and ship future products and infrastructure at Meta.


The company began transferring “strong” software engineers into AAI earlier this month.


Ifeoma Ajunwa, a law professor at Yale University, noted that computer logging and screenshotting technology have historically been used by companies. These tools typically aim to identify employee misconduct or non-work-related activities.


Ajunwa stated that the decision to log employees’ keystrokes advances data-gathering goals further. This subjects white-collar employees to a degree of real-time surveillance previously experienced only by delivery drivers and gig workers.


Ajunwa said, “On the U.S. side, federally, there is no limit on worker surveillance.” She added that state-level laws, at most, require workers to be generally informed when employers are monitoring them.


Valerio De Stefano, a law professor at York University in Toronto who studies technology and comparative labour law, believes European law would likely prohibit such monitoring.


In some European countries, like Italy, electronic monitoring for tracking employee productivity is explicitly illegal. German courts have ruled that employers can only deploy keystroke logging in exceptional circumstances, such as suspicion of a serious criminal offence.


De Stefano added that the practice would likely be considered a violation of Europe’s General Data Protection Regulation.


More broadly, De Stefano said, employee awareness of employer surveillance shifts the balance of workplace power in the employer’s favour.

  • Meta is implementing new software to track employee computer activity, including mouse movements, clicks, and keystrokes.

  • This data will be used to train artificial intelligence models, with the goal of developing AI agents that can perform work tasks autonomously.

  • Meta Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth stated the vision is for AI agents to "primarily do the work," with employees directing and improving them.


Source: REUTERS

Apple has named John Ternus its next Chief Executive Officer, with current Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook transitioning to the role of executive chairman. This leadership change occurs as the iPhone maker prepares for an industry shift spurred by artificial intelligence.


Two men happily walk on a gravel path surrounded by greenery. They are engaged in conversation, wearing casual dark outfits.
Credit: APPLE

Mr. Ternus, who joined Apple in 2001, has served as the long-time hardware chief, quietly but steadfastly improving products over the years. He has played a key role in reigniting sales of products such as Apple’s Mac computers, which have gained market share against PCs.


Smiling man with dark hair wearing a dark gray polo shirt against a plain gray background, conveying a cheerful mood.
Credit: APPLE

At 50 years old, Mr. Ternus is the same age Mr. Cook was when he took over Chief Executive Officer duties from Apple co-founder Steve Jobs. Mr. Ternus most recently showed Apple’s iPhone Air last autumn, the biggest revamp of the iPhone since 2017 and a key proving ground for several new chips.


Despite his low external profile, Mr. Ternus has helped bring about ubiquitous products like iPads and AirPods. He will be tasked with helping Apple navigate a technology landscape upended by AI, after the organisation lost its crown as the world's most valuable company to Nvidia.


Mr. Ternus has also helped sharpen the distinctions among Apple's product lines. He introduced "Pro" models of Macs and iPhones that pushed their technological capabilities and prices to new heights, while also offering products such as the MacBook Neo and iPhone "e" models at some of Apple's lowest-ever prices.


He will need to contend with Nvidia, which has announced its own personal computer and is developing chips capable of powering laptops. Rivals such as Meta Platforms, whose augmented-reality glasses have become a surprising success, also pose a challenge with a fraction of the capabilities and price of Apple's Vision Pro headset.


Gil Luria, managing director of D.A. Davidson & Co., stated, "The promotion of Mr. Ternus indicates the company will focus on new hardware devices such as folding phones, glasses, VR devices, and AI pins."


Perhaps the biggest challenge Mr. Ternus will face is integrating AI into the iPhone, the most successful consumer product in history, and the rest of Apple's lineup. Earlier this year, Apple struck a deal with longtime smartphone rival, Alphabet’s Google, to use Google's Gemini in an effort to improve its Siri virtual assistant.


Despite introducing a form of artificial intelligence to the public imagination in 2011 with Siri, Apple has not yet scored a hardware or software product hit centred on new AI technologies. Emerging rivals such as OpenAI have, in contrast, attracted hundreds of millions of users.


Bob O'Donnell, head of tech consulting firm TECHAnalysis Research, commented, "I expect his biggest challenge and efforts will be focused on getting a better AI story and offering together that relies more on Apple's own capabilities and less on third parties."


Mr. Cook will become the company's executive chairman, Apple said. Apple stock has soared twenty-fold since Mr. Cook took over as Chief Executive Officer in August 2011.


Mr. Cook was recruited by Mr. Jobs from Compaq during the 1990s PC boom, when Mr. Jobs was working to rescue Apple from the brink of insolvency. While Mr. Cook made his early reputation at Apple by building out its sprawling supply chain in China, he became a celebrity Chief Executive Officer in his own right over the years.


He was the first Fortune 500 Chief Executive Officer to publicly come out as gay in 2014 and took public stances on issues such as workplace diversity and corporate sustainability. Mr. Cook, who presented a custom golden plaque to U.S. President Donald Trump, will also continue to engage with policymakers, the company said.


In naming Mr. Ternus chief executive, Apple is shifting from a supply-chain guru who helped turn Apple into a global brand that churns out hundreds of millions of units per year, to a leader who has long focused on design and products. Ben Bajarin, Chief Executive Officer of technology consulting firm Creative Strategies, said Mr. Ternus is well-liked within Apple "and will bring fresh energy."


Separately, Apple said Johny Srouji, who has overseen Apple's custom chip and sensor designs, has been named chief hardware officer. Mr. Srouji will continue to oversee that group, along with the hardware engineering group that Mr. Ternus once led, which will now be overseen by Tom Merieb.

  • John Ternus has been named Apple's new Chief Executive Officer, with Tim Cook becoming executive chairman.

  • Mr. Ternus, a long-time hardware chief, is tasked with navigating the AI technology landscape and integrating AI into Apple's products.

  • Mr. Ternus has been instrumental in improving Mac sales, developing iPads and AirPods, and creating "Pro" and "e" models for various products.


Source: REUTERS

Huawei Technologies has released its initial artificial intelligence glasses, joining an increasingly competitive sector. The Shenzhen-based technology firm now directly competes with US company Meta, alongside Chinese peers such as Alibaba Group Holding and Rokid, in the smart eyewear segment. This development signals a deliberate push by Huawei into an expanding market.


Woman wearing black smart glasses with "Huawei" text, hoop earring, neutral expression. Close-up on white background.
Credit: HUAWEI CENTRAL

The new eyewear carries a starting price of USD 367, or 2,499 yuan. These glasses weigh 35.5 grams and integrate various AI functions, including voice interaction and payment capabilities.


Woman in glasses with a neutral expression, wearing a brown blazer and white turtleneck. Text: HUAWEI Pura series launch, April 20, 2026.
Credit: HUAWEI CENTRAL

The device allows users to conduct live streams and participate in video calls from a first-person perspective, powered by Huawei's proprietary chip designed specifically for eyewear.


And, according to He Gang, CEO of Huawei's consumer business, the multimodal AI features also enable the estimation and tracking of food calories and permit payments via QR code scanning. This product line previously offered more basic functions, such as translation, indicating a significant functional upgrade with this introduction. Huawei's entry adds further impetus to China's burgeoning smart eyewear market.


Global shipments of AI smart glasses saw Meta command an 85 percent market share in 2025. The company shipped 7.4 million units, a threefold increase for its Oakley and Ray-Ban branded glasses. This data was provided by Omdia last month, establishing Meta as the dominant player in the worldwide arena.


But, in mainland China, where Meta eyewear is not available, the market dynamics differed. Shipments of AI glasses within mainland China escalated 35-fold in 2025, reaching 950,000 units. Here, Xiaomi led with a 32 percent market share, followed closely by Rokid, which held 29 percent. Alibaba, the parent company of this publication, secured third place with 16 percent of the mainland market.


Omdia forecasts that global shipments for AI glasses will exceed 15 million units in 2026, indicating continued growth for the segment. Chinese smart glasses manufacturer Rokid and smartphone maker Xiaomi held 3.9 percent and 3.5 percent global market shares respectively, according to Omdia's findings. The broad field includes offerings from various established and emerging technology companies.


So, other contenders have also been active in this space. Alibaba introduced new smart glasses powered by its Qwen AI assistant in Feb. The S1 model commenced sales last week, starting at USD 631, or 4,299 yuan. This follows Alibaba's Quark AI Glasses, which launched in Nov. 2025 in mainland China, priced from USD 279, or 1,899 yuan.


Xiaomi presented smart glasses in June, priced at USD 294, or 1,999 yuan. Baidu's Xiaodu AI Glasses Pro also entered the market in Nov., with a price point of USD 338, or 2,299 yuan. These product releases highlight the rapid innovation and competitive pricing strategies in the Chinese smart eyewear sector.


At the same launch event, Huawei also unveiled new handsets within its mid-range flagship Pura 90 series, with prices commencing at USD 690, or 4,699 yuan. This pricing matches its predecessor model, which was released in June. Yu Chengdong, chairman of Huawei's consumer business group, indicated that memory shortages had increased costs by up to USD 220, or 1,500 yuan.


And, Yu noted that the company operates under substantial pressure regarding its current pricing strategy. He suggested that price increases might become necessary in the future if the company cannot contain rising costs. Huawei remains one of the few domestic smartphone manufacturers that has not yet raised prices, unlike Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi, which have all announced adjustments to absorb increased memory expenses.


Huawei also unveiled its Pura X Max, a book-style foldable model starting at USD 1,615, or 10,999 yuan. This device has garnered industry attention due to its wider horizontal-fold design, which bears a resemblance to Apple's unconfirmed foldable iPhone concept. The introduction of these devices showcases Huawei's broad product development efforts across various technology segments.


  • Huawei has introduced its first AI glasses, competing with Meta, Alibaba, and Rokid.

  • The new eyewear costs USD 367 and features voice interaction, payments, and first-person video.

  • Meta held an 85 percent global market share in AI smart glasses in 2025.

  • Mainland China saw a 35-fold increase in AI glasses shipments in 2025, led by Xiaomi and Rokid.

  • Huawei also launched new Pura 90 series handsets and a foldable smartphone.


Source: SCMP

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