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OpenAI Whistleblower Found Dead in San Francisco Apartment in Apparent Suicide

Suchir Balaji, a 26-year-old ex-employee of OpenAI who went public with allegations that the company unethically used data to train its artificial intelligence platform, was found dead in his San Francisco apartment in an apparent suicide, according to a report by Techcrunch.

Balaji worked as a researcher for the OpenAI technical staff from November 2020 to August 2024. He made headlines in an interview with the New York Times when he said he helped OpenAI use enormous amounts of data gathered from the Internet to train ChatGPT without permission, leading up to its public launch in November 2022. Among other allegations, the Times reported that the company created its own transcription software, which it ran on YouTube to harvest data.

“I initially didn’t know much about copyright, fair use, etc., but became curious after seeing all the lawsuits filed against GenAI companies,” Balaji posted on X in October. “When I tried to understand the issue better, I eventually came to the conclusion that fair use seems like a pretty implausible defense for a lot of generative AI products, for the basic reason that they can create substitutes that compete with the data they’re trained on.”

Last December, The Times sued OpenAI for copyright infringement. During an interview at the New York Times annual Dealbook Summit, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman maintained that his company did nothing wrong and said the newspaper was “on the wrong side of history.”

Ian Crosby, Susman Godfrey partner and lead counsel for The New York Times told Decrypt that Altman misunderstands copyright law:”What he misses is that’s precisely why copyright law exists, and there’s a way to build new technologies that complies with the law and the rights of copyright holders,” Crosby said. “History has repeatedly shown that it is entirely possible to do both.”

According to authorities, Balaji was found dead in his apartment on November 26 after police and medical personnel were called to his home to do a wellness check. “The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) has identified the decedent as Suchir Balaji, 26, of San Francisco,” the ME’s office said in a statement. “The manner of death has been determined to be suicide.”

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