Amazon Announces Major AI Leadership Transition
Amazon has initiated a significant leadership change within its artificial intelligence division. CEO Andy Jassy informed employees that Rohit Prasad, who has led the company’s artificial general intelligence (AGI) initiative since 2023, will be stepping down at the end of the year. Prasad, a long-time Amazon executive, previously served as the chief scientist behind the Alexa voice assistant’s development and played a pivotal role in shaping the company’s AI direction, including spearheading the Nova model series.
Taking over the reins is Peter DeSantis, a seasoned executive from Amazon Web Services (AWS). DeSantis will head a newly formed organization focused on the development of AI models, custom computer chips—such as Graviton, Trainium, and Nitro—and the company’s quantum computing initiatives. He will report directly to Jassy, indicating the strategic importance of this new structure.
New Faces and Fresh Strategy
In addition to DeSantis, Pieter Abbeel, a renowned AI and robotics professor from UC Berkeley and Amazon Distinguished Scientist, will lead Amazon’s frontier model research. Abbeel joined Amazon in 2024 after the acquisition of his robotics startup, Covariant. His leadership is expected to inject academic rigor and innovation into the company’s next-generation AI systems.
The departure of Prasad is somewhat unexpected, especially considering his recent appearances at Amazon’s re:Invent conference and at Fortune Brainstorm AI 2024, where he discussed the latest advancements in the Nova models. However, industry observers note that Amazon’s AI efforts, particularly in AGI and Alexa, have faced growing scrutiny and are perceived to be lagging behind competitors such as Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI.
Oracle’s $10 Billion Data Center Hits a Hurdle
In other tech news, Oracle faced a setback this week as its plans to build its largest-ever data center encountered financing troubles. Shares of the company fell by 5% following reports that Blue Owl Capital has withdrawn from backing a $10 billion project to construct a 1-gigawatt cloud computing facility in Saline Township, Michigan.
The project, which is intended to support operations for OpenAI’s Stargate initiative, was set to start construction early next year. While Oracle maintains that the data center remains “on schedule,” the search for a new equity partner is ongoing. Blackstone has emerged as a potential candidate, but no formal agreement has been finalized. Investor concerns about Oracle’s $100 billion in net debt and high infrastructure spending continue to mount.
Academy Awards to Stream on YouTube
In a surprising shift, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced that beginning in 2028, the Oscars will no longer air on ABC, its broadcast home since 1976. Instead, the prestigious awards ceremony will move to YouTube, owned by Google, for the 2029–2033 broadcast cycle.
This new agreement goes beyond the Oscars broadcast and includes a range of Academy events such as the Oscar nominations, Governors Awards, Student Academy Awards, Science and Technical Awards, and other film-related content and podcasts.
Declining viewership on traditional TV—particularly on ABC, where ratings have dropped consistently since 2014—may have driven the shift. According to reports from the Hollywood Reporter, Disney, which owns ABC, was unwilling to continue paying premium prices for an event that no longer attracts the audience it once did. Negotiations reportedly broke down over disagreements on telecast length and revenue sharing.
Other Noteworthy Tech Updates
Elsewhere in the tech sector:
- Meta is testing limits on Facebook business pages, allowing only two links per month unless users pay $15.
- Micron reported stellar Q1 earnings, more than doubling expectations due to rising memory chip prices.
- Coursera has acquired rival Udemy in a $2.5 billion deal, consolidating two major players in the edtech space.
- Warner Bros urged shareholders to reject a recent acquisition bid by Paramount, calling it “illusory” and inferior to an offer from Netflix.
- OpenAI is reportedly in discussions with Amazon to raise $10 billion in funding, seeking a valuation of $500 billion. Amazon is a top investor in rival Anthropic.
- U.S. game console sales have plummeted to their lowest November in 20 years, due to tariffs and rising component costs.
- And finally, insiders claim that Mark Zuckerberg’s leadership style at Meta has become “suffocating,” according to reports in the Financial Times.
The tech landscape is shifting rapidly, with leadership changes, strategic pivots, and platform migrations reshaping the industry’s future. Whether Amazon’s AI reorganization pays off remains to be seen, but it signals a renewed focus on competitiveness and innovation.
This article is inspired by content from Original Source. It has been rephrased for originality. Images are credited to the original source.
