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MiroMind, an AI research company under Chen Tianqiao, suspends MiroThinker services in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau

MiroMind, an AI research company founded by Chen Tianqiao, has notified users via email that due to business adjustments, its MiroThinker service (dr.miromind.ai web version and mobile app) will be suspended in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau starting May 12, 2026, with the resumption time to be determined. The company's official website remains unaffected and can still be accessed normally.

MiroMind is an AI research company established by Chen Tianqiao, the founder of Shanda Group, and MiroThinker is its intelligent agent service. This suspension coincides with an escalation in the company's intellectual property disputes.

Last month, MiroMind released an internal notice regarding false statements related to Dai Jifeng, indicating that early core personnel Dai Jifeng had issues of "commercial integrity breach."

Source: Public information

ABAB AI Insight

Chen Tianqiao has continuously invested in large model and intelligent agent research since re-entering the tech field in 2023 with the establishment of MiroMind. This regional service suspension is a proactive business adjustment amid escalating intellectual property disputes. Previously, MiroMind has repeatedly addressed controversies involving former employees through internal notices, similar to its strong asset control style during the early Shanda era.

In terms of capital strategy, MiroMind is shifting resources from high-regulatory-risk areas to other global markets, reducing potential legal and compliance costs by suspending services in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau, while focusing on overseas or non-controversial business lines. The goal is to protect core technologies and intellectual property, avoiding disputes that could impact future financing or collaboration.

Similar to recent adjustments made by several AI startups in response to US-China tech friction, and reflecting Chen Tianqiao's emphasis on intellectual property during the Shanda era, MiroMind is currently under pressure to transition from early expansion to compliance streamlining and differentiated global positioning.

Essentially, this is a response to regulatory changes: the escalation of intellectual property disputes and changes in regional regulatory environments are forcing MiroMind to reconstruct its service geographical boundaries, withdrawing capital from high-risk markets and concentrating it in controllable areas. Mechanically, this is achieved by suspending services in specific regions to reduce legal exposure while retaining flexibility for a long-term global AI intelligent agent strategy.

ABAB News · Cognitive Law

When intellectual property disputes escalate, the quickest way to mitigate losses is often to first contract high-risk areas. The founder's strong control over core assets has never changed from the Shanda era to the AI era. When business adjustments take precedence over user retention, the company has prioritized long-term compliance over growth.

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·ABAB News
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2 min read
·7d ago
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