Last week, news broke that Meta is buying Chinese AI startup Manus for around $2 billion. The company is known for its AI agent that can handle everything from job interviews to stock analysis. Meta plans to integrate Manus’ AI agent into its own products. Now, the Financial Times reports that China’s Ministry of Commerce has decided to review the purchase to determine whether the deal violates the country’s export control rules for technology. Manus was founded in Beijing but moved its team and technology to Singapore in the summer of 2025, where the company now operates under the name Butterfly Effect Pte. According to the Financial Times, the deal has raised concerns in China as it could encourage more tech companies to move abroad to avoid domestic regulation. At the same time, Manu’s technology is not considered strategically critical, so intervention is not certain. The review is currently said to be at an early stage and may lead to export license requirements. Neither China’s Ministry of Commerce nor Meta have commented on the data while Manus declined to comment. This article originally appeared on Computer Sweden . More Meta news: It’s everyone but Meta in a new AI standards group Meta splits its AI division into two Meta’s SPICE framework pushes AI toward self-learning without human supervision