In addition, Dreamer is licensing its technology to Meta, according to the post.
Meta did not immediately reply to PYMNTS’ request for comment.
According to the post, Dreamer released the beta a month ago and has already seen thousands of people use it to build personal, intelligent software. These users have built thousands of agents that perform tasks such as managing email, creating learning tools and helping users achieve health goals.
“[Meta Chief AI Officer] Alexandr Wang was helpful to us from the very beginning, and when we showed Dreamer to Mark Zuckerberg and Nat Friedman at Meta earlier this year, it was clear right away that we see the same future — one where billions of people have the power to create software that makes their lives better,” the Dreamer team said in the post. “We’re thrilled to continue accelerating this mission at Meta Superintelligence Labs.”
Bloomberg reported Monday that Wang announced in an internal post that the Dreamer team is joining Meta Superintelligence Labs and that they will work on AI agents and associated projects.
“Our conviction in agents is stronger than ever,” Wang said in the post, per the report. He added that Meta is “building agents that are truly personalized and always-on, with the ability to integrate across surfaces and wearables.”
Meta created Meta Superintelligence Labs in June as a new business unit that would include teams working on the company’s foundation models, product, Fundamental AI Research (FAIR) and the next generation of its models.
It was reported March 10 that Meta acquired Moltbook, the Reddit-like social network built for AI agents that made headlines in late January, and that Moltbook co-founders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr would join Meta Superintelligence Labs.
“The Moltbook team joining MSL opens up new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses,” a Meta spokesperson told TechCrunch at the time.