The Guardian (USA)

Facebook to create 10,000 jobs in EU to help build ‘metaverse’

- Dan Milmo Global technology editor

Facebook is creating 10,000 jobs in the EU as part of its push to build a virtual world for its users.

The company has trumpeted the “metaverse” as the next big phase of growth for large tech companies and recently announced a $50m (£36m) investment programme to ensure that this metaworld is built “responsibl­y”.

Facebook and other tech firms envision the metaverse as a world where people lead their social and profession­al lives virtually, via virtual reality headsets such as Facebook’s Oculus Rift, and through augmented reality where a digital layer is placed on top of real life, as in the popular Pokémon Go game. The company envisages an interconne­cted web of metaverses, as users step from Facebook’s realm seamlessly into an adjoining world created by other tech firms such as Google, Apple or a big video games publisher.

In a blogpost announcing the hiring drive, Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice-president of global affairs, said Europeans will play an important role in shaping the metaverse. Clegg said developing an inhabitabl­e VR and AR world would require continued investment in talent across the business.

“So today, we’re announcing a plan to create 10,000 new high-skilled jobs within the EU over the next five years,” Clegg said. “This investment is a vote of confidence in the strength of the European tech industry and the potential of European tech talent.”

Clegg cited Germany’s work on mRNA vaccines and Sweden’s progress towards becoming a cashless society as examples of the continent’s tech prowess. Facebook also invests in tech research in Europe, including an artificial intelligen­ce research lab in France and research into virtual reality and augmented reality in Cork, Ireland.

The jobs announceme­nt does not cover the UK, where Facebook employs about 4,000 people, although the company said it would continue to expand in Britain. The EU recruitmen­t drive is expected to focus on Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Poland, the Netherland­s and Ireland.

The statement also referred to the EU’s status as an influentia­l regulator of new internet ventures. This month the EU’s competitio­n commission­er, Margrethe Vestager, said the mass outage on Facebook’s platforms, which affected billions of users worldwide, showed the dangers of relying on only a few big tech players.

“European policymake­rs are leading the way in helping to embed European values like free expression, privacy, transparen­cy and the rights of individual­s into the day-to-day workings of the internet,” Clegg said.

Facebook is developing its metaverse strategy against a backdrop of further regulatory and political pressure on both sides of the Atlantic after a series of document leaks by a whistleblo­wer, Frances Haugen. Haugen has accused Facebook of putting “astronomic­al profits before people” and has released documents, which formed the basis of a number of revelation­s in the Wall Street Journal, including an article showing that Facebook was aware that its Instagram platform damaged the mental health of some teenage girls. Facebook has described the WSJ revelation­s about Instagram as a “mischaract­erisation” of its research.

Last month the company announced a $50m investment programme to ensure the metaverse meets regulatory and legal concerns, distributi­ng the money among organisati­ons and academic institutio­ns such as Seoul National University and Women in Immersive Tech.

 ?? Artur Widak/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Facebook last month announced a $50m investment programme to ensure the metaverse meets regulatory and legal concerns. Photograph:
Artur Widak/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Facebook last month announced a $50m investment programme to ensure the metaverse meets regulatory and legal concerns. Photograph:

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