Technology

Musk's xAI Faces Shakeup as Founding Team Exits, Eyes Space Data Centers

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Alanbatnews -

Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup, xAI, is undergoing a significant restructuring following the departure of key members of its founding team. The shakeup comes as the company aims to accelerate its AI development and compete with industry leaders.

Two co-founders recently resigned within a 24-hour period, bringing the total number of founding team members who have left the company to half of the original 12 since its inception. Yohai Wu announced his departure on X, stating it was time for the "next chapter" of his career, while Jimmy Ba described his exit as an opportunity to "reset."

The departures follow previous exits, including infrastructure lead Kyle Kosic, who joined OpenAI, and Christian Szegedy. Igor Babuschkin left in August, and Greg Yang stepped down last month due to health reasons. The company recently merged with SpaceX in a deal valuing the combined entity at $1.25 trillion.

According to the Financial Times, Jimmy Ba's resignation stemmed from tensions within the technical team related to pressures to improve AI model performance and catch up with competitors like OpenAI and Anthropic. xAI has also faced regulatory scrutiny after its platform's image generation tools were used to create deepfake pornography.

In a company-wide meeting, Musk emphasized the need for "speed and acceleration" in the next phase, stating that the fastest company will lead the market. The new organizational structure includes four divisions: Grok (chatbot and voice), led by Aman Madan; Coding, led by co-founder Manuel Kroiss; Imagine (video), led by co-founder Guodong Zhang; and Macrohard (digital agents), a new division led by Toby Pohlen.

Musk outlined ambitious plans, including creating data centers in space to increase computing power and a lunar factory to manufacture AI-powered satellites. The company is also expanding its Colossus data center in Memphis and plans to invest over $20 billion in a new facility called Macroharder, requiring thousands of advanced computing systems.

Nikita Beer, head of product, noted that applications linked to the X platform have reached approximately one billion users, generating $1 billion in annual recurring revenue from subscriptions.