China blocks Zuck’s acquisition of AI outfit Manus
Back to the drawing board for Meta's AI ambitions
China has blocked Meta’s acquisition of AI upstart Manus.
A brief Monday statement from the Middle Kingdom’s foreign investment regulator says Beijing “made a decision to prohibit foreign investment in the Manus project in accordance with laws and regulations, and has required the parties involved to withdraw the acquisition transaction.”
Manus burst onto the scene in March 2025 with what it called a “general agent” that used a hosted Ubuntu desktop to undertake tasks on users’ behalf. The company and its tech caught the eye of social networking giant Meta, which bought Manus in December 2025.
Manus made itself easy prey by moving its headquarters to Singapore to evade Chinese regulators and gain easier access to capital.
China took a dim view of that idea and, in January 2026, started an investigation into the acquisition.
That investigation concluded with the decision to prevent the transaction that would have seen Manus become part of Meta.
Beijing and Washington both feel that locally-made-and-controlled AI is a strategic asset, so restrict exports of what they see as significant technologies.
One way to exert that control is by disallowing foreign investments, a practice that is common around the world and across many classes of technologies and commodities. China’s decision to use a foreign investment review to stop Meta buying Manus is therefore not unusual.
The decision is, however, a signal that Beijing doesn’t like the idea of Chinese AI becoming Western property, and that China’s government won’t look favorably on local companies that shift to other countries.
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What it means for Meta is anyone’s guess. Talks between acquired companies and their soon-to-be-owners often progress to detailed technical matters. Zuck’s AI operatives may already know plenty about Manus’s technology without having yet taken possession of its source code and team.
Meta has said its use of AI has helped to boost its advertising business and has made its products even more addictive/engaging, but it has yet to deliver a consumer-facing AI product, its recent models mostly underwhelmed AI observers, and the company is yet to get anywhere near realizing CEO-for-life Mark Zuckerberg’s vision of delivering a “personal superintelligence” that will assist its customers to navigate life. ®
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Narrower topics
- AIOps
- Antitrust
- China Mobile
- China telecom
- China Unicom
- Cross-border data flow
- Cyberspace Administration of China
- DeepSeek
- Digital Services Act
- Digital sovereignty
- Gemini
- Google AI
- GPT-3
- GPT-4
- Great Firewall
- Hong Kong
- Information Technology and the People's Republic of China
- JD.com
- Large Language Model
- Machine Learning
- MCubed
- Neural Networks
- NLP
- Open Compute Project
- Privacy Shield
- Retrieval Augmented Generation
- Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation
- Shenzhen
- Star Wars
- Tensor Processing Unit
- TOPS
- Uyghur Muslims