Meta hires AWS executive Dave Brown to expand AI data center efforts Meta hired Dave Brown, a nearly 19-year AWS veteran, to lead its AI data center expansion and build Meta Compute, a new cloud computing initiative. Brown will oversee Meta's Louisiana data center project, which is expanding from 2 to 5 gigawatts with over $50 billion in investment, as Meta pivots toward renting AI infrastructure to external customers. Meta hires AWS executive Dave Brown to expand AI data center efforts The nearly 19-year AWS veteran will lead data center expansion and help build Meta's new cloud computing initiative Meta just poached one of Amazon Web Services’ most senior leaders. Dave Brown, a senior vice president at AWS who spent nearly 19 years helping build the company’s compute and machine learning services, is headed to Meta to oversee the social media giant’s rapidly expanding AI infrastructure ambitions. Brown will report directly to Meta’s head of infrastructure when he joins in the coming weeks, with a mandate centered on two things: building out data centers at a massive scale and constructing something called Meta Compute. From AWS advisor to Meta’s cloud architect Brown wasn’t just any executive at AWS. According to a memo from AWS CEO Matt Garman dated July 15, 2026, Brown was part of the advisory group for Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. Now he’s walking out the door at the end of July 2026 to help Meta challenge the very company he helped build. Dave Treadwell will succeed Brown at AWS. Meta’s AI data center project in Louisiana is expanding from 2 gigawatts of capacity to 5 gigawatts. Total investment in the Louisiana project alone exceeds $50 billion. Meta Compute and the cloud play Meta Compute represents a potential pivot toward renting out AI infrastructure to outside customers, the same way AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud do today. The cloud infrastructure market is dominated by three players, with AWS alone generating more than $100 billion in annual revenue. Why this matters for the AI infrastructure race Meta already operates one of the largest private computing networks in the world, training massive AI models including its Llama family of large language models on infrastructure that rivals what any cloud provider offers. The company has kept all of that capacity for internal use, with advertising currently accounting for the vast majority of its income. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .