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tech.yahoo.com
Mark Zuckerberg is building an AI clone of himself. Most people just ...

Mark Zuckerberg is building an AI version of himself that can sit in meetings in his place. Most people will never need that. What they need is quieter: an agent that sits in the tools they already use and helps them focus and follow through on the chaos of their work day.A recent Fortune story on Fathom AI shows what that looks like. The Austin team started this year with three people and $300 of their own money. Three months in, they were at $300,000 ARR. One client, Tiger Aesthetics, hadn’t opened a single new account in all of 2024. After adopting Fathom, they opened 225 in one quarter.The founders lean on 12 agents baked into daily operations. One runs customer success for a national sales force. Another scans the competitive landscape every few hours. The CEO comes out of sales, not software, yet with this structure he was able to walk into the field on day one with his own automated system and operate like a full team.Fortune also covered KNOWIDEA, a three-person company with a similar shape. The CEO, Yatharth Sejpal, is 23 and has never written code. In six months, his team signed six enterprise customers and hit $500K ARR, with a strategic investment at a $15M valuation.Taken together, these cases tell a simple story. A handful of people are using AI agents as real teammates, not as side projects, and the result is the kind of impact and efficiency that used to require whole departments and big budgets.Now look at the other end of the spectrum.Recent reporting on Meta describes a project to build a highly realistic AI version of Mark Zuckerberg that can sit in for him with employees. The company is feeding this system with his public remarks, his way of speaking, and his current thinking on strategy, so that spending time with it feels as close as possible to talking directly to the founder. Alongside that, there is a separate “CEO agent” idea focused on helping him pull up information quickly and support his work running a $1.6 trillion company.Inside the company, staff are being pushed closer to AI as well. People are encouraged to design their own agents to automate internal work, including by using open tooling. Product managers are being asked to go through an internal AI “baseline”, with technical design questions and a section the company calls “vibe coding.” Some see this as an honest attempt to build skills. Others look at the same exercises and quietly wonder: is this about helping me grow, or about deciding who is expendable.One giant c...

tech.yahoo.com
businessinsider.com
Mark Zuckerberg says most AI agents don't pass the 'mother' test

Mark Zuckerberg said that were't many AI agents "that I would give to my mother." Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images 2026-05-01T08:39:01.291Z Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that many AI agents showed promise — but weren't ready for his mom. "How do you make a version of that experience that is a lot more polished?" he asked on Meta's first-quarter earnings call. Zuckerberg also said that the company wasn't focused on building AI coding agents, a priority for Meta's competitors. Your mom probably hasn't put an OpenClaw in her group chat yet. Mark Zuckerberg knows it. AI agents are having a moment. Techies are wearing lobster hats to meetups, and companies are onboarding AI employees. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is excited about this progress — but says that many agents aren't yet accessible enough.On Meta's first-quarter earnings call, Zuckerberg said that many of the existing agents don't pass one important test."There's a lot of agents out there," he said. "There aren't that many that I would want to give to my mother."Those other agents offer a "very exciting glimpse" of what will be possible in the future, he said, but there's one major flaw: the agents are difficult to use. Zuckerberg pointed to OpenClaw specifically. Users need to install a computer locally, access their computer's terminal, and then configure the system to use the AI agents. There were "small numbers of millions of people" in the world that are completing the set-up, he said, but Meta aims for the masses."How do you make a version of that experience that is a lot more polished and dialed and easy?" Zuckerberg asked. The agent they're focused on "just works," he said.Passing that informal "mother" test — as in, a product you'd recommend for your mother that she could use — was more important than hitting a specific launch deadline, Zuckerberg said.On the call, Zuckerberg also gave a glimpse into his position on investing resources into developing coding agents.Meta's competitors have invested heavily in the coding agent race. OpenAI and Anthropic have Codex and Claude Code. SpaceX, which owns xAI, struck a $60 billion deal for the right to acquire the AI coding startup Cursor.Zuckerberg said that Meta was "not necessarily" a developer tools company, though he wasn't against building a coding agent. It's not Meta's primary focus, though."People conflate coding with self-improvement more than they should," he said. "Coding is one ingredient for the model self improving. I...

businessinsider.com
msn.com
Meta develops AI clone of Zuckerberg for executive duties - MSN

AI-powered executive stand-in: Meta is developing an AI replica of Mark Zuckerberg to attend meetings and support corporate decision-making. From boardroom to daily work: Similar AI agents are ...

msn.com
fortune.com
Mark Zuckerberg is building an AI clone of himself. Most people just ...

Mark Zuckerberg is building an AI version of himself that can sit in meetings in his place. Most people will never need that. What they need is quieter: an agent that sits in the tools they ...

fortune.com