- The U.S. has focused more on artificial general intelligence than China.
- Former OpenAI researcher Yao Shunyu, now chief AI scientist at Tencent, said Friday he aims to develop AGI.
- His ambitions come as other Chinese tech companies have hired from Silicon Valley.
BEIJING — A former OpenAI researcher is now chief AI scientist for
Tencent in China, and wants to build artificial general intelligence.
It's a sign of a shift in the U.S.-China tech race.
AI with human-level or above capabilities (AGI) has long been the goal of U.S. companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Alphabet, which acquired
British startup DeepMind.
Chinese companies rushing to catch up on AI and facing U.S. chip controls have instead
focused on ways to use the technology in applications from factories to consumer electronics. Baidu CEO Robin Li previously predicted it would take until at least 2034 to achieve AGI, in contrast to Elon Musk's 2026 forecast at the time.
But as Chinese companies grab talent from Silicon Valley, they're increasingly bringing the U.S. vision with them.
"My personal goal is that in China we should establish a long-term AGI organization," said Tencent Chief AI Scientist Yao Shunyu, who joined the company in the last year after leaving his OpenAI role, in remarks CNBC translated from Mandarin.
Yao was discussing the next stage of AI development on-stage Friday with Tencent's Cloud executive Dowson Tong at the company's event in Beijing co-organized with local authorities. A senior Beijing official gave opening remarks.

Yao said Friday his vision for AGI will require foundational knowledge, products and frontier exploration.
"I don't think ChatGPT or Claude will be the only super-app," Yao said, saying untapped potential is in the "trillions of dollars." Performance of an AI tool is most important, followed by cost, he said, adding that the path forward in China is with smaller AI models and more consistent performance on basic tasks.
His optimism contrasted with growing caution on AI in the U.S.
Anthropic
on Thursday warned that frontier models are nearing the point where they can improve themselves without human oversight. The company called for an industry slowdown or pause in new model development to stave off disruption to society.
The San Francisco-based startup earlier this year urged Washington to
maintain the U.S. lead over Chinese models. Anthropic has emphasized AI safety from its founding and drawn criticism from rivals that its safety warnings are designed to hobble competition.
Uncertainty over U.S. immigration policies has also encouraged Chinese nationals to
find work in their home country, even if the pay may be lower. China is also ramping up investment to attract talent and spend more on "basic research" as the country pursues scientific breakthroughs over the next five years.
Companies compete for talent, whether based in the same country or elsewhere. But among recent high-profile moves, Alibaba
reportedly hired Google DeepMind researcher Hao Zhou to support Qwen AI development. Zhou and Alibaba did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Wu Yonghui, vice president of research at Google DeepMind, left to
head research at ByteDance Seed from California in February 2025. Startup Moonshot, behind the Kimi AI model, was founded by former Meta AI and Google Brain employee Yang Zhilin.<small>Source: CNBC</small>
Business
China poaches more AI talent from the U.S. as it eyes the next 'super-app'
CNBC
June 05, 2026
2 views
Advertisement
How did this make you feel?