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SILICON VALLEY IS PRICING ACADEMICS OUT OF AI RESEARCH


WITH EYE-POPPING SALARIES AND ACCESS TO COSTLY COMPUTING POWER, AI COMPANIES ARE
DRAINING ACADEMIA OF TALENT

By Naomi Nix
, 
Cat Zakrzewski
and 
Gerrit De Vynck
March 10, 2024 at 7:00 a.m. EDT

Fei-Fei Li speaks at a Google conference in San Francisco in March 2017. Li is
now at the forefront of a growing chorus of voices who argue that researchers
are being boxed out of the filed of AI. (Paul Chinn/San Francisco
Chronicle/Getty Images)

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Fei-Fei Li, the “godmother of artificial intelligence,” delivered an urgent plea
to President Biden in the glittering ballroom of San Francisco’s Fairmont Hotel
last June.

The Stanford professor asked Biden to fund a national warehouse of computing
power and data sets — part of a “moonshot investment” allowing the country’s top
AI researchers to keep up with tech giants.



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She elevated the ask Thursday at Biden’s State of the Union address, which Li
attended as a guest of Rep. Anna G. Eshoo (D-Calif.) to promote a bill to fund a
national AI repository.

Li is at the forefront of a growing chorus of academics, policymakers and former
employees who argue the sky-high cost of working with AI models is boxing
researchers out of the field, compromising independent study of the burgeoning
technology.

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As companies like Meta, Google and Microsoft funnel billions of dollars into AI,
a massive resources gap is building with even the country’s richest
universities. Meta aims to procure 350,000 of the specialized computer chips —
called GPUs — necessary to run gargantuan calculations on AI models. In
contrast, Stanford’s Natural Language Processing Group has 68 GPUs for all of
its work.



To obtain the expensive computing power and data required to research AI
systems, scholars frequently partner with tech employees. Meanwhile, tech firms’
eye-popping salaries are draining academia of star talent.

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Big tech companies now dominate breakthroughs in the field. In 2022, the tech
industry created 32 significant machine learning models, while academics
produced three, a significant reversal from 2014, when the majority of AI
breakthroughs originated in universities, according to a Stanford report.

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Researchers say this lopsided power dynamic is shaping the field in subtle ways,
pushing AI scholars to tailor their research for commercial use. Last month,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the company’s independent AI research lab
would move closer to its product team, ensuring “some level of alignment”
between the groups, he said.

“The public sector is now significantly lagging in resources and talent compared
to that of industry,” said Li, a former Google employee and the co-director of
the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI. “This will have profound
consequences because industry is focused on developing technology that is
profit-driven, whereas public sector AI goals are focused on creating public
goods.”



This agency is tasked with keeping AI safe. Its offices are crumbling.

Some are pushing for new sources of funding. Li has been making the rounds in
Washington, huddling with White House Office of Science and Technology Director
Arati Prabhakar, dining with the political press at a swanky seafood and
steakhouse and visiting Capitol Hill for meetings with lawmakers working on AI,
including Sens. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and Todd Young
(R-Ind.).

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Large tech companies have contributed computing resources to the National AI
Research Resource, the national warehouse project, including a $20 million
donation in computing credits from Microsoft.

“We have long embraced the importance of sharing knowledge and compute resources
with our colleagues within academia,” Microsoft Chief Scientific Officer Eric
Horvitz said in a statement.

Policymakers are taking some steps to address the funding gaps. Last year, the
National Science Foundation announced $140 million investment to launch seven
university-led National AI Research Institutes to examine how AI could mitigate
the effects of climate change and improve education, among other topics.

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Eshoo said she hopes to pass the Create AI Act, which has bipartisan backing in
the House and Senate, by the end of the year, when she is scheduled to retire.
The legislation “essentially democratizes AI,” Eshoo said.

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But scholars say this infusion may not come quickly enough.

As Silicon Valley races to build chatbots and image generators, it is drawing
would-be computer science professors with high salaries and the chance to work
on interesting AI problems. Nearly, 70 percent of people with artificial
intelligence PhDs end up getting a job in private industry compared with 21
percent of graduates two decades ago, according to a 2023 report.



Amid explosive demand, America is running out of power

Big Tech’s AI boom has pushed the salaries for the best researchers to new
heights. Median compensation packages for AI research scientists at Meta climbed
from $256,000 in 2020 to $335,250 in 2023, according to Levels.fyi, a
salary-tracking website. True stars can attract even more cash: AI engineers
with a PhD and several years of experience building AI models can command
compensation as high as $20 million over four years, said Ali Ghodsi, who as CEO
of AI start-up DataBricks is regularly competing to hire AI talent.

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“The compensation is through the roof. It’s ridiculous,” he said. “It’s not an
uncommon number to hear, roughly.”

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University academics often have little choice but to work with industry
researchers, with the company footing the bill for computing power and offering
data. Nearly 40 percent of papers presented at leading AI conferences in 2020
had at least one tech employee author, according to the 2023 report. And
industry grants often fund PhD students to perform research, said Mohamed
Abdalla, a scientist at the Canadian-based Institute for Better Health at
Trillium Health Partners, who has conducted research on the effect of industry
on academics’ AI research.

“It was like a running joke that like everyone is getting hired by them,”
Abdalla said. “And the people that were remaining, they were funded by them — so
in a way hired by them.”

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Google believes private companies and universities should work together to
develop the science behind AI, said Jane Park, a spokesperson for the company.
Google still routinely publishes its research publicly to benefit the broader AI
community, Park said.

David Harris, a former research manager for Meta’s responsible AI team, said
corporate labs may not censor the outcome of research but may influence which
projects get tackled.

“Any time you see a mix of authors who are employed by a company and authors who
work at a university, you should really scrutinize the motives of the company
for contributing to that work,” said Harris, who is now a chancellor’s public
scholar at the University of California at Berkeley. “We used to look at people
employed in academia to be neutral scholars, motivated only by the pursuit of
truth and the interest of society.”

These fake images reveal how AI amplifies our worst stereotypes

Tech giants procure huge amounts of computing power through data centers and
have access to GPUs — specialized computer chips that are necessary for running
the gargantuan calculations needed for AI. These resources are expensive: A
recent report from Stanford University researchers estimated Google DeepMind’s
large language model, Chinchilla, cost $2.1 million to develop. More than 100
top artificial intelligence researchers on Tuesday urged generative AI companies
to offer a legal and technical safe harbor to researchers so they can scrutinize
their products without the fear that internet platforms will suspend their
accounts or threaten legal action.



The necessity for advanced computing power is likely to only grow stronger as AI
scientists crunch more data to improve the performance of their models, said
Neil Thompson, director of the FutureTech research project at MIT’s Computer
Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, which studies progress in computing.

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“To keep getting better, [what] you expect to need is more and more money, more
and more computers, more and more data,” Thompson said. “What that’s going to
mean is that people who do not have as much compute [and] who do not have as
many resources are going to stop being able to participate.”

Tech companies like Meta and Google have historically run their AI research labs
to resemble universities where scientists decide what projects to pursue to
advance the state of research, according to people familiar with the matter who
spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak to private company matters.

Those workers were largely isolated from teams focused on building products or
generating revenue, the people said. They were judged by publishing influential
papers or notable breakthroughs — similar metrics to peers at universities, the
people said. Meta top AI scientists Yann LeCun and Joelle Pineau hold dual
appointments at New York University and McGill University, blurring the lines
between industry and academia.

Top AI researchers say OpenAI, Meta and more hinder independent evaluations

In an increasingly competitive market for generative AI products, research
freedom inside companies could wane. Last April, Google announced it was merging
two of its AI research groups DeepMind, an AI research company it acquired in
2010, and the Brain team from Google Research into one department called Google
DeepMind. Last year, Google started to take more advantage of its own AI
discoveries, sharing research papers only after the lab work had been turned
into products, The Washington Post has reported.

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Meta has also reshuffled its research teams. In 2022, the company placed FAIR
under the helm of its VR division Reality Labs and last year reassigned some of
the group’s researchers to a new generative AI product team. Last month,
Zuckerberg told investors that FAIR would work “closer together” with the
generative AI product team, arguing that while the two groups would still
conduct research on “different time horizons,” it was helpful to the company “to
have some level of alignment” between them.

“In a lot of tech companies right now, they hired research scientists that knew
something about AI and maybe set certain expectations about how much freedom
they would have to set their own schedule and set their own research agenda,”
Harris said. “That’s changing, especially for the companies that are moving
frantically right now to ship these products.”

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