Meta to cut back on third-party vendors in favor of AI for content enforcement

Meta to cut back on third-party vendors in favor of AI for content enforcement


Arda Kucukkaya | Anadolu | Getty Images

Meta is beginning a yearslong rollout of more advanced artificial intelligence systems that will handle content enforcement-related tasks like catching scams and removing illegal media, as the company reduces its use of third-party vendors and contractors in favor of AI.

In a blog post Thursday, Meta said that the process could take a few years, and that the company won’t completely rely on AI for monitoring content.

“While we’ll still have people who review content, these systems will be able to take on work that’s better-suited to technology, like repetitive reviews of graphic content or areas where adversarial actors are constantly changing their tactics, such as with illicit drugs sales or scams,” Meta said in the post.

Meta didn’t name any of its current vendors, but the company has previously relied on contractors from firms like Accenture, Concentrix and Teleperformance.

The announcement represents Meta’s latest effort to use its hefty investments in AI to streamline its business and operations while it struggles to find revenue-generating applications that compete with offerings from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google. Meta said AI will help more accurately flag violations “while also stopping more scams and responding faster to real-world events with fewer overenforcement mistakes.”

Meanwhile, Meta is also defending itself in several high-profile trials involving the safety of children on its platform, an issue directly tied to its existing challenges with content moderation.

The company said it will still rely on experts to design, train and oversee its AI content enforcement systems, and humans will remain involved with the “most complex, high‑impact decisions” that involve law enforcement and appeals related to account disablement.

The company also said Thursday that it has debuted a new Meta AI digital support assistant that people on Facebook and Instagram can use to address various account-related issues.

According to a Reuters report last week, Meta has been considering whether to lay off over 20% of its workforce to help balance its big AI spending. Meta responded that it was “a speculative report about theoretical approaches.”

WATCH: Would be surprised if Meta workforce cuts are as big as reported.

Would be surprised in Meta workforce cuts are as big as reported, says Evercore ISI's Mark Mahaney
Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.



Source

Closing arguments conclude in Musk v. Altman, jury to deliberate next week
Technology

Closing arguments conclude in Musk v. Altman, jury to deliberate next week

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman arrives at the federal courthouse, as the trial in Elon Musk’s lawsuit over OpenAI’s for-profit conversion continues, in Oakland, California, U.S., May 14, 2026. Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters The first phase of the Musk v. Altman trial concluded proceedings in federal court in Oakland, California, on Thursday after attorneys for Elon […]

Read More
Cramer backs Nvidia selling AI chips in China — but says the stock can thrive either way
Technology

Cramer backs Nvidia selling AI chips in China — but says the stock can thrive either way

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Nvidia should be allowed to sell artificial intelligence chips into China, arguing the U.S. would be better served by keeping Chinese companies reliant on American technology rather than forcing them to develop competing products. “You force them to build their own chips, they will catch up and with seemingly unlimited electricity, […]

Read More
Cerebras is the hot new AI chipmaker. Here’s Jim Cramer’s advice on the stock
Technology

Cerebras is the hot new AI chipmaker. Here’s Jim Cramer’s advice on the stock

CNBC’s Jim Cramer cautioned investors against chasing shares of Cerebras Systems after its explosive market debut Thursday. “While there might be a situation in the future where I can recommend Cerebras, I just can’t even come close to justifying the valuation up here given how much it’s already run right out of the gate,” the […]

Read More