I think Meta's gameplan is complex. Inspiration as well as adoption, not stepping on the toes of regulators prolly another intention. Have a look at PyTorch for example. Massively popular ML framework, with its lots of interesting projects running.
If Meta frequently shares their "algorithms" they take the blame out of its usage. After all, who is to blame when everybody does "it" and you are very open about it.
Use cases, talent visibility as well as attraction also plays a role. After all, Google was so fancied, due to its many open source projects. "Show, don't tell".
If Meta frequently shares their "algorithms" they take the blame out of its usage. After all, who is to blame when everybody does "it" and you are very open about it.
Use cases, talent visibility as well as attraction also plays a role. After all, Google was so fancied, due to its many open source projects. "Show, don't tell".