Meta sweeping layoff wave impacting 8,000 jobs USA Today - News Apr 20, 2026 Apr 20, 2026 Updated Apr 24, 2026 0 YC3 Grants Massive proton therapy device installed at Buffett Cancer Center Chief ribbon cutting Early morning storms bring wind and hail Ranking the top five stadiums at the 2026 World Cup People attend College World Series Fan Fest Nebraska's Will Bolt and players after elimination from NCAA Baseball Regional Steilacoom ferry terminal Pride flag draws angry emails, town cites state lease Wrapped in paradox: Most inclusive tournament in terms of countries participating yet many excluded Municipal Band Taylor Swift among celebs at stars studded MSG for Game 4 of NBA Finals Migrant woman speaks out on ICE camp conditions after deportation and husband’s death Nebraska Reptiles NCAA Faces Crisis Over Ruling on Brendan Sorsby's Eligibility Lion statue stolen from Piqued Curiosities Antiques Serena Williams makes her tennis return after nearly four years Literacy Training Prefer us on Google Learn More Meta is planning a first wave of layoffs on May 20, sources told Reuters. As featured on Meta to start capturing employee mouse movements, keystrokes for AI training data Meta said the purpose was to improve the company's AI models in areas where they struggle to replicate how humans interact with computers. Latest video Cyclists launch from the starting line at Robidoux US-Iran peace agreement: A reason to be optimistic? Early morning storms bring wind and hail US fans celebrate victory over Paraguay in World Cup opener Watch: Sights and Sounds from Pride in the Park Birthright citizenship decision looms as Trump court cases mount SpaceX soars in $2T market debut, making Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire Naturalization ceremony at Homestead National Historical Park Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
Meta to start capturing employee mouse movements, keystrokes for AI training data Meta said the purpose was to improve the company's AI models in areas where they struggle to replicate how humans interact with computers.