Speaking at the Bloomberg Tech conference, Wang signaled that consumer health tools will be central to Meta's AI differentiation strategy against OpenAI and Anthropic.
Meta’s top AI executive just told the world where the company plans to win the AI race. And it’s not by building the biggest model or the flashiest chatbot. It’s by keeping you healthy.
Alexandr Wang, Meta’s Chief AI Officer, used his appearance at the Bloomberg Tech conference in San Francisco on June 5 to make the case that health capabilities will be the defining feature of Meta’s next generation of AI models. When your platform serves billions of users, he argued, the way you stand out isn’t raw benchmarks. It’s practical value in people’s daily lives.
The Muse Spark play #
Wang pointed to Meta’s Muse Spark model as early evidence that the health-first strategy is working. According to Wang, the model’s health-related capabilities have already exceeded internal expectations.
Wang was candid about the competitive reality. Muse Spark still trails behind elite models like Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s ChatGPT on broader performance metrics.
Wang’s first year steering Meta’s AI ship #
Wang took the helm as Meta’s Chief AI Officer in 2025, following Meta’s $14 billion investment for a 49% stake in Scale AI, the data labeling company Wang founded. That deal made him one of the youngest and most expensive hires in Big Tech history, and it gave Meta access to Scale AI’s data infrastructure, a critical ingredient for training competitive models.
Roughly one year into the role, Wang has overseen a portfolio of AI projects that extends beyond Muse Spark, including initiatives internally codenamed Mango and Avocado.
His emphasis on health at Bloomberg Tech also reflects CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s broader ambition to recover from earlier stumbles in Meta’s AI efforts. The company spent years watching OpenAI capture public imagination with ChatGPT while its own open-source Llama models earned respect from developers but struggled to translate into consumer products people actually used every day.
What this means for investors and the competitive landscape #
The risk, predictably, is regulatory. Health advice sits in a uniquely sensitive category. One bad recommendation at scale, delivered to billions of users, could trigger regulatory scrutiny that makes Meta’s privacy battles look quaint by comparison.
For crypto-native investors and builders, Wang made no mention of digital assets or blockchain integration in his Bloomberg Tech remarks. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our