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Sign up free →What happened: Meta is partnering with Reliance Industries to lease and operate its first AI-enabled data center in India, and has launched the US$115 million(約180億円) America's Workforce Academy to train skilled workers for its data center operations. At the same time, the European Commission is requiring free WhatsApp API access for rival AI chatbots, and Canada is proposing stricter rules on under-16s' social media access.
Why it matters: Meta is committing capital and partnerships to expand AI infrastructure capacity, which the company sees as central to improving personalization and monetization across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and its AI tools. However, regulators in the EU and Canada are now directly constraining how Meta's core messaging apps and AI assistants can operate, potentially affecting the monetization plans those apps depend on.
What to watch: The pace at which the India data center partnership scales, how widely the US workforce program is adopted, and the timeline for regulatory decisions in Europe and Canada—all three will shape how much capital Meta must shift between infrastructure, talent, and compliance spending.
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