Meta Building Photorealistic AI Clone of Zuckerberg for Employee Interactions

Published
Score
10

Why it matters

Meta is developing a photorealistic AI avatar of CEO Mark Zuckerberg trained on his image, voice, mannerisms, and strategic insights. The tool allows Meta's 79,000 employees to interact with the digital clone for feedback and guidance when Zuckerberg is unavailable. Zuckerberg is personally involved in the project, spending 5 to 10 hours weekly training and testing the avatar. The initiative emerged from Meta's broader work on 3D AI characters and operates separately from an earlier "CEO agent" designed for executive tasks.

The Financial Times first reported the project on April 14, 2026. Details about the avatar's technical specifications, deployment scope, and employee adoption rates remain unclear. It is also uncertain whether Meta plans to extend this technology to other executives or whether the company views this as a permanent internal tool or a pilot program.

For attorneys advising Meta or its competitors, this development signals the company's aggressive pivot toward AI-driven workplace infrastructure. The project raises potential questions around deepfake liability, employee consent and data use, and whether regulatory bodies will scrutinize the creation of executive digital likenesses. As AI avatars of public figures become technically feasible, expect increased attention to the legal frameworks governing their creation, deployment, and potential misuse—particularly if similar technology spreads to external-facing applications or other high-profile companies.

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