HomeWorldWhy Zuckerberg’s billions couldn’t poach OpenAI talent: Inside the battle for AI’s brightest minds

Why Zuckerberg’s billions couldn’t poach OpenAI talent: Inside the battle for AI’s brightest minds

As Meta offers massive pay packages to lure top researchers, smaller labs like Thinking Machines and Safe Superintelligence are holding firm.

August 02, 2025 / 14:32 IST
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Why Zuckerberg’s billions couldn’t poach OpenAI talent
Why Zuckerberg’s billions couldn’t poach OpenAI talent

When Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg reached out to Mira Murati, the former CTO of OpenAI, earlier this year with an offer to buy her AI startup, Thinking Machines Lab, she declined. So he tried a more aggressive move—attempting to recruit her team. His top target was Andrew Tulloch, a former Meta engineer and now a key figure at Thinking Machines. To lure him back, Zuckerberg reportedly offered a package potentially worth $1.5 billion over six years.

Tulloch said no. And so did every one of Murati’s roughly 50 employees.

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Meta’s deep pockets can’t always buy loyalty

Even in Silicon Valley, where massive compensation packages are common, walking away from a 10-figure offer is unusual. But this episode highlights a shift: in the world of generative AI, money isn’t the only magnet. Companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Murati’s Thinking Machines have built deep internal cultures and quasi-missionary zeal around their visions of artificial general intelligence (AGI). That ethos—combined with tight-knit teams and flat hierarchies—has created a kind of fortress against poaching, the Wall Street Journal reported.