Meta is reportedly training an AI version of Mark Zuckerberg that employees could talk to directly, according to The Guardian. The project sounds like a punchline at first, but it signals a real shift within a company that keeps handing more work to AI.
A chatbot modeled on the CEO would not just answer questions faster. It could also change how staff receive company guidance, interpret policy, and decide what counts as official leadership direction when the answer comes back in Zuckerberg’s tone rather than in a manager’s email.
Meta is already automating the layers around work
According to The Guardian, the system is being built for internal use and is meant to reflect Zuckerberg’s mannerisms, tone, public statements, and thinking on strategy. At a company with nearly 79,000 employees, the appeal is easy to see. Most people will never get direct access to the CEO, but a bot can be available on demand.
That idea also fits the direction Meta has already been taking. Earlier this year, Meta’s AI performance reviews showed the company had begun measuring employees, in part, on how well they use AI tools. It has also pushed a broader AI identity through projects like Muse Spark and the infrastructure expansion behind Meta Compute.
Seen that way, the reported chatbot does not look like a random experiment. It looks like Meta is applying the same logic to leadership communication that it has already applied elsewhere: if something is slow, layered, and hard to scale, see whether AI can compress it.
Trust is the real problem
There is a clean case for a staff-facing Zuckerberg bot. It could summarize public strategy, repeat settled policy, and answer routine questions without forcing every issue through layers of management. For a huge company, that is not a silly use case. It is a practical one.
The trouble starts when a tool like that stops feeling like a convenience layer and starts sounding like authority. A chatbot can be fluent, confident, and wrong all at once. If it gives a bad answer on priorities, policy, or internal direction, employees may not know whether they are reading official guidance, an AI summary, or a polished guess trained to sound like the boss.
The privacy question is just as uncomfortable. The Guardian report does not say whether employee conversations with the tool would be logged, retained, or used to improve the system. For staff, that is not a footnote. A chatbot that sounds like Zuckerberg might make some questions easier to ask, but it could make others much harder.
Meta has not publicly outlined guardrails for the reported tool. Until it does, the real issue is not whether the company can build an AI Zuckerberg. It is a question of whether workers will be expected to treat that system as a shortcut to leadership, a searchable policy layer, or something in between.
Also read: Meta’s recent AI control scare shows what can happen when internal systems move faster than oversight.


