Renowned OpenAI Researcher Heads to Tencent in High-Stakes AI Talent War
Global Economic Times Reporter
korocamia@naver.com | 2025-09-13 10:45:31
A prominent researcher from OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, has reportedly moved to Chinese tech giant Tencent in a move that highlights the escalating global competition for top-tier artificial intelligence talent. According to a Bloomberg report, Yao Shunyu, a 29-year-old AI expert, has joined Tencent to focus on integrating AI into the company's services.
Yao, a highly sought-after talent, graduated from China's prestigious Tsinghua University and earned his Ph.D. in computer science from Princeton University in his 20s. He interned at Google before joining OpenAI in June of last year, where he specialized in AI agent research. His expertise even attracted the attention of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who reportedly attempted to recruit him.
Tencent, the developer of China's most widely used mobile messaging app, WeChat, allegedly offered Yao a staggering compensation package of up to 100 million yuan (approximately $14.6 million USD). While the specific terms of his contract remain unconfirmed, the reported offer underscores the immense financial incentives driving the current talent war.
This fierce competition for AI experts is not new. Meta, for example, has been aggressively recruiting over 50 AI professionals from rivals like OpenAI, Google, and Apple, offering annual salary packages as high as $1 million. The trend is a clear indicator that companies are willing to invest heavily to secure the minds that will shape the future of AI.
Yao's departure from a leading U.S. AI company to a major Chinese corporation is seen as one of the most notable recent examples of talent flowing from the American AI sector to China. This shift points to the global nature of the AI race, where a combination of groundbreaking research, market access, and financial incentives are influencing the movement of key personnel. As companies worldwide scramble to gain an edge, the competition for the brightest minds in AI is expected to continue intensifying.
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