The deal in numbers and facts
Meta announced the acquisition of the startup Manus, which develops autonomous agent-based artificial intelligence systems. According to Reuters, Manus is headquartered in Singapore and its founders are originally from China. The deal is estimated at roughly $2–3 billion.
Manus builds general-purpose AI agents that independently carry out complex tasks — from data analysis and programming to market research. The company claims their agents require significantly fewer prompts than classic chatbots like ChatGPT. In 2025, Manus, with support from its parent company Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology, raised $75 million at a valuation of about $500 million.
"After the deal is completed, all Chinese stakes in Manus will be liquidated, and the company's services in the PRC will be closed."
— Reuters (quote from Meta)
Why this matters
Technological competition: Meta is clearly strengthening its agent-AI direction, where OpenAI, Google and others have already invested. Agent models have the potential to automate complex workflows and change the toolset of business and media.
Platform control and influence over information: the integration of such agents into Facebook, Instagram and Meta AI increases the corporation's influence over how content is generated and distributed — from targeted advertising to automated replies and assistants.
Geopolitics and security: the startup's ties to Chinese investors and Meta's decision to liquidate Chinese stakes indicate an effort to minimize regulatory and national-security risks. It also serves as a reminder that large tech deals are not only about innovation but also about risk-management strategies.
Risks and opportunities for Ukraine
Opportunities: the deal signals strong internal demand for agent solutions — this is a chance for Ukrainian IT companies and research groups to develop compatible services, integrate into export chains and partner with global platforms. Investing in these directions during the war also demonstrates market confidence in the long-term skills of the workforce and technologies.
Risks: agent AIs are dual-use. They can strengthen defense (automation of intelligence, data analysis, logistics) and threats (automated disinformation campaigns, tools for cyberattacks). Data control and algorithmic transparency will become critically important for maintaining information security.
What Ukraine should do: strengthen expertise in algorithm auditing, seek partnerships with international players to gain access to advanced solutions, and at the same time demand transparency and guarantees from platforms regarding the protection of critical infrastructure and personal data.
What’s next
Meta is accelerating the agent-AI race: this means more intensive investment, faster product development and increased competition among tech giants. Regulators and supply-chain partners will create new rules of the game, and countries with limited resources must develop adaptation strategies.
Conclusion
The Manus deal is not just another large check in Silicon Valley. It signals where the AI industry is heading: toward automated agents that can change workflows, the media ecosystem and the balance of power in the digital space. For Ukraine, the question is not only how to take advantage of this technology, but also how to protect the public information space and critical infrastructure from its dual-use nature. Whether we can turn risks into opportunities depends on the decisions made today by policymakers, business and experts.