
Meta is no longer quietly building its AI future—it’s doing it loudly, and in full view. This week, Meta hired four more top researchers from OpenAI, making it a total of eight major names who’ve jumped ship to join Mark Zuckerberg’s new superintelligence team.
These aren’t just any researchers. They include people who helped build GPT-4.1, o1, and o3-mini—the very engines behind OpenAI’s recent AI breakthroughs.

The Secret List No One Was Supposed to Know About
According to a report from The Wall Street Journal, Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a “secret list” of AI researchers he personally wants to recruit. He’s been offering them massive pay packages, and even reviews their AI papers himself.
He also runs a group chat—yes, really—called “Recruiting Party”, where Meta executives discuss hiring tactics. It’s part LinkedIn, part locker room, part war room.
Meta clearly isn’t playing fair. It’s playing to win.
Drama, Memes, and Memos: Inside the Fallout at OpenAI
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman tried to play it cool on a podcast last week, brushing off the losses. But a now-deleted tweet from an OpenAI researcher hinted at concern. Then came an internal memo—leaked to WIRED—from OpenAI CRO Mark Chen, trying to reassure the team after the exits.
Meta’s CTO even called Sam Altman “dishonest” over his comments on alleged $100 million bonuses. The tension is no longer behind closed doors—it’s out in the open, and it’s intense.
Why This Really Matters (Beyond the Headlines)
Eight researchers may not sound like a lot—but in the world of AI, it’s huge. These are core builders. These are the minds behind the models. Losing them isn’t just about talent—it’s about momentum.
Remember that viral phrase? “OpenAI is nothing without its people.”
It’s being tested right now in real-time.
Meta, meanwhile, looks sharper than ever. Once criticized for lagging in the AI race, it’s suddenly one of the most aggressive players on the board.
What’s Next?
Zuckerberg clearly wants Meta to lead the next wave of AI. And with a growing army of top researchers, he might just pull it off. This isn’t just about poaching talent. It’s about taking the crown.
If OpenAI was the king of 2023–24, Meta is trying to write the script for 2025.
Also Read Meta Strikes OpenAI: 4 Top Researchers Walk Out, Zuckerberg Declares AI War