Meta partners with Reuters for AI news content

The financial terms of the multi-year agreement remain undisclosed, but Reuters will be compensated.

Joelle Pineau, Meta's VP of AI research, will leave the company at the end of May, having led key projects like PyTorch and Llama AI since joining in 2017.

Meta Platforms announced a new partnership with Reuters on Friday, allowing its AI chatbot to give users real-time answers about news and current events using Reuters content. The agreement marks Meta’s return to licensed news distribution after scaling back on news content due to ongoing disputes over misinformation and revenue sharing with regulators and publishers. The financial specifics of the deal remain undisclosed, as Meta and Reuters-parent Thomson Reuters have chosen to keep the terms confidential.

Meta’s AI chatbot, available on platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram, will now offer users summaries and links to Reuters articles when they ask news-related questions. Although Meta hasn’t clarified if Reuters content will be used to train its language models further, the company assures that Reuters will be compensated under a multi-year agreement, as reported by Axios.

Reuters, known for its fact-based journalism, confirmed its licensed content to multiple tech providers for AI usage without detailing specific deals.

Why does it matter?

The partnership reflects a growing trend in tech, with companies like OpenAI and Perplexity also forming agreements with media outlets to enhance their AI responses with verified information from trusted news sources. Reuters has already collaborated with Meta on fact-checking initiatives, a partnership that began in 2020. This latest agreement aims to improve the reliability of Meta AI’s responses to real-time questions, potentially addressing ongoing concerns around misinformation and helping to balance the distribution of accurate, trustworthy news on social media platforms.