Mike Krieger has stepped down from the Figma board. This move follows reports of Anthropic's new AI model, Opus 4.7. The model is expected to include design tools. This directly competes with Figma's core business. AI is increasingly entering the design software market. This signals a major shift in the tech industry.
In a move underscoring the intensifying clash between artificial intelligence and traditional software, Mike Krieger, Chief Product Officer of Anthropic, has stepped down from the board of Figma.
The resignation comes as a report by The Information reveals that Anthropic's upcoming Opus 4.7 model is expected to feature built-in design tools, directly challenging Figma's core business and signaling AI's growing push into the design software space.
The resignation, disclosed to the US Securities and Exchange Commission on April 14, 2026, marks a significant shift in the relationship between two leading technology companies that had previously worked closely together on AI integration.
This development points to a broader strategic realignment, as AI labs expand beyond language models into more specialized software domains. As a result, the technology industry is beginning to grapple with deeper questions about where the lines will be drawn between AI platforms and traditional software companies.
Figma, valued at approximately $10 billion as a publicly traded firm, has built industry-standard tools widely used by user experience designers to create interfaces for websites and applications. The company had previously maintained a close working relationship with Anthropic, integrating the lab's models into its products to serve as intelligent design assistants.
Mike Krieger: Background
Mike Krieger stepped down as the Chief Product Officer at Anthropic. Prior to his stint in the top role, he was the co-founder and CEO of Artifact, a tool for recommending news to readers (bought by Yahoo), according to Signal Fire.
He was also the co-founder & CEO of Instagram, apparently the fastest-growing app of all time with its reach to over 800 million monthly users.
Krieger pursued his higher education at Stanford University, where he developed a strong interdisciplinary foundation. He completed a Bachelor of Science in Symbolic Systems, studying a blend of Human-Computer Interaction, Psychology, Philosophy, and Computer Science from 2004 to 2008, according to his LinkedIn.
He went on to earn a Master of Science in Symbolic Systems with a specialization in Human-Computer Interaction from 2007 to 2008, further deepening his understanding of how technology and human behavior intersect.