Productization in this context is creating APIs for Meta's models.
Fireworks.ai, Together.ai, and literal boatloads of other startups are making real money just efficiently serving up these models that Meta is supposedly using to... choke out startups.
The comment I replied to is under the mistaken idea that the presence of free models from Meta has a chilling effect on startups trying to build their own models, but right now the biggest barriers are capital and data.
Meta updated Llama to allow for synthetic generation, and they're even partnering with these startups give them distribution and day 0 access to the models.
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If anything I'd say Meta is actively fighting against the big tech overlords the comment thinks they're trying to join. Even before Ilya mentioned it, it was clear to me that the power of post-training was going to become more and more important (I've literally built a business on it).
Llama represents a real ongoing chance for tiny startups with minimal resources to get into the fray very affordably (through either offering inference, or post-training for a specific task, etc.), scale revenue, and then start to compete against much larger, resource rich companies.
Fireworks.ai, Together.ai, and literal boatloads of other startups are making real money just efficiently serving up these models that Meta is supposedly using to... choke out startups.
The comment I replied to is under the mistaken idea that the presence of free models from Meta has a chilling effect on startups trying to build their own models, but right now the biggest barriers are capital and data.
Meta updated Llama to allow for synthetic generation, and they're even partnering with these startups give them distribution and day 0 access to the models.
-
If anything I'd say Meta is actively fighting against the big tech overlords the comment thinks they're trying to join. Even before Ilya mentioned it, it was clear to me that the power of post-training was going to become more and more important (I've literally built a business on it).
Llama represents a real ongoing chance for tiny startups with minimal resources to get into the fray very affordably (through either offering inference, or post-training for a specific task, etc.), scale revenue, and then start to compete against much larger, resource rich companies.