OpenAI is shifting resources toward improving its flagship chatbot ChatGPT, leading to the departure of several senior researchers. The San Francisco company faces intense competition from Google and Anthropic, prompting a strategic pivot from long-term research. This change has raised concerns about the future of innovative AI exploration at the firm.
OpenAI, valued at $500 billion and led by CEO Sam Altman, has redirected efforts from experimental projects to enhancing the large language models behind ChatGPT, which now serves 800 million users. This pivot follows a "code red" declaration by Altman in December, spurred by Google's Gemini 3 outperforming OpenAI's models on benchmarks and advances in Anthropic's Claude for code generation.
Several key departures highlight the tension. In January, vice-president of research Jerry Tworek left after seven years, citing a desire to pursue continuous learning research—enabling models to adapt to new data without forgetting old information. Sources indicate his requests for more computing power and staff were denied, leading to a dispute with chief scientist Jakub Pachocki, who favored the existing LLM architecture.
Model policy researcher Andrea Vallone departed last month to join Anthropic, after being tasked with an "impossible" role in safeguarding users' mental health amid growing attachments to ChatGPT. Economist Tom Cunningham exited last year, reportedly due to the company's move away from impartial research toward product-focused work.
Chief research officer Mark Chen defended the strategy, stating that "long-term, foundational research remains central to OpenAI and continues to account for the majority of our compute and investment." He emphasized that deploying research in real-world products accelerates feedback and rigor.
Former employees described the environment as increasingly political for non-LLM projects, with teams on video and image tools like Sora and DALL-E feeling under-resourced. One anonymous source noted: "If you want to do original blue-sky research, it is quite tough."
Investors remain optimistic. Jenny Xiao of Leonis Capital argued that OpenAI's user base creates a "stickier advantage" than pure model superiority, shifting the competitive moat to platform lock-in amid the cut-throat AI race.