Facebook trumpets massive new supercomputer
Facebook’s parent company Meta announced on Monday it was launching one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers to boost its capacity to process data, despite persistent disputes over privacy and disinformation.
The US tech giant said the array of machines could process images and video up to 20 times faster than their current systems.
“The experiences we’re building for the metaverse require enormous compute power (quintillions of operations / second!),” wrote Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook, referring to his idea of a 3D internet where users don virtual reality headsets and sensor equipment to create an immersive experience.
The firm envisages developing Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools that will, among other things, allow people speaking in several different languages to understand each other in real-time.
Meta said the machine, known as AI Research SuperCluster (RSC), was already in the top five fastest supercomputers and would become the fastest AI machine in the world when fully built in the next few months.
Platforms like Facebook and Google have long been criticised for the way they process and utilise the data they take from their users.
The two firms currently face legal cases across the European Union that allege data transfers from the bloc to the United States are illegal.
And the AI algorithms that funnel Facebook users towards appealing posts have been criticised for helping to fuel disinformation and hate speech.