
Meta's Absorption of Scale AI Talent: Strategic Leap or Antitrust Red Flag?
Meta Platforms' nearly $15 billion investment in Scale AI has garnered attention not only for its size, but for its structure: v Meta receives a 49% stake paired with the absorption of Scale AI's CEO Alexandr Wang and key research personnel.
Unlike other high-profile AI investments—such as Microsoft's stake in OpenAI or Amazon's in Anthropic— Scale AI's CEO and research personnel will be Meta employees despite Meta being a “minority shareholder” in Scale AI. This move further blurs the line between strategic partnership and acquisition. This blog explores the regulatory implications of Meta's approach, especially the role that executive and technical talent transfers may play in inviting legal scrutiny.

Doomed to Fail: The Limits of Musk’s Case Against the WFA
X Corp. (formally “Twitter”) has sued the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA) and a number of member companies for orchestrating an illegal boycott of Twitter. X Corp. v. World Federation of Advertisers. The complaint asserts that it is “an antitrust action relating to a group boycott by competing advertisers of one of the most popular social media platforms in the United States.” The lawsuit premise of this (forcing advertisers to do business with a floundering company using antitrust law) is absurd, and should not survive summary judgment (initial motions).