Amazon to reshuffles AI leadership, puts Peter DeSantis in charge of AGI

Key Highlights:

  • Amazon has announced that Rohit Prasad will exit the company next year. Those unaware, Prasad has been the man who has guided Alexa, Nova models, and Amazon’s AGI push in recent years.
  • The company is restructuring its AI strategy, with focus on frontier models, custom chips, and quantum computing under AWS veteran Peter DeSantis, with researcher Pieter Abbeel leading frontier model work.
  • Amazon shifts focus from benchmarks to practical AI outcomes amid criticism over delayed launches and lagging model performance.

There’s a big leadership shakeup about to happen inside Amazon’s artificial intelligence team. Yesterday, the company’s CEO, Andy Jassy yesterday announced that Rohit Prasad, the head of artificial general intelligence (AGI), will leave Amazon next year. Jassy describes the moment as an “inflection point” for its AI goals.

Rohit Prasad has been the man behind Amazon’s AI efforts

For those unaware, Prasad has been with Amazon since 2013. Ever since AI came onto the scene, he has been the man behind Amazon’s AI efforts. To give you an example, Alexa went mainstream as a popular voice assistant under Prasad’s leadership at Amazon. He later also oversaw the launch of the Amazon Nova family of AI models. In 2023, Amazon tapped him to lead its newly formed AGI group. So, behind the scenes, Amazon has been pushing towards more advanced, general-purpose AI systems.

As part of the transition, Amazon is grouping its most important AI works under a new structure. Peter DeSantis, a senior vice president at Amazon Web Services, will lead a new division that brings together frontier AI models, custom chip development, and quantum computing. To catch you up, he has been with Amazon for nearly 30 years now. The decision comes as Amazon wants to stay between software breakthroughs and the infrastructure powering them.

Meanwhile, AI researcher Pieter Abbeel will also be leading Amazon’s frontier model research team. By grouping some prominent names from AWS leadership, Amazon wants to balance research goals with operational scale. Speaking of Prasad, he is very outspoken about Amazon’s different philosophy around AI progress.

Prasad believes leaderboard performance doesn’t reflect true model capability

In a recent The Verge interview, he spoke against the industry’s obsession with benchmarks. He argues that they may fail to explain the real-world usefulness. “The evals are frankly getting noisy,” he said, adding that leaderboard performance doesn’t reflect true model capability. That stance by Prasad came at a time when rivals like OpenAI, Google, and Meta aggressively push towards benchmark results.

All this while, Amazon has been criticized for how it has been lagging behind competitors in high-profile AI launches. On the other hand, the long-promised AI overhaul of Alexa has suffered repeated delays. Speaking of the recently-released Nova 2 model family, it is lagging behind some competitors on popular benchmarks, although Amazon insists it is focused on practical outcomes rather than scores.

Jassy framed the leadership change as a reset rather than a retreat. He said the company has built a strong foundation and is seeing early traction, with DeSantis bringing “unified focus” across technologies that Amazon believes will define its next decade. With Prasad’s departure now confirmed, Amazon’s AI story enters a new chapter. Only time will tell whether the new leadership can translate goals into products that customers actuall find useful.

Source: https://www.timesofai.com/