A former OpenAI employee who said the company had violated copyright laws during work on its ChatGPT chatbot has been found dead, authrotities confirmed this week.
According to CNBC, San Francisco police and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner confirmed that Suchir Balaji, 26, was found dead inside his Buchanan Street apartment on Nov. 26.
The medical examiner’s office said Balaji had committed suicide and this week police officials said there was “currently, no evidence of foul play.”
However, information that he held was expected to play a key part in lawsuits against the San Francisco-based company.
Silicon Valley reports: Balaji’s death comes three months after he publicly accused OpenAI of violating U.S. copyright law while developing ChatGPT, a generative artificial intelligence program that has become a moneymaking sensation used by hundreds of millions of people across the world.
Its public release in late 2022 spurred a torrent of lawsuits against OpenAI from authors, computer programmers and journalists, who say the company illegally stole their copyrighted material to train its program and elevate its value past $150 billion.
The Mercury News and seven sister news outlets are among several newspapers, including the New York Times, to sue OpenAI in the past year.
In an interview with the New York Times published Oct. 23, Balaji argued OpenAI was harming businesses and entrepreneurs whose data were used to train ChatGPT.
“If you believe what I believe, you have to just leave the company,” he told the outlet, adding that “this is not a sustainable model for the internet ecosystem as a whole.”
Balaji grew up in Cupertino before attending UC Berkeley to study computer science. It was then he became a believer in the potential benefits that artificial intelligence could offer society, including its ability to cure diseases and stop aging, the Times reported. “I thought we could invent some kind of scientist that could help solve them,” he told the newspaper.
But his outlook began to sour in 2022, two years after joining OpenAI as a researcher. He grew particularly concerned about his assignment of gathering data from the internet for the company’s GPT-4 program, which analyzed text from nearly the entire internet to train its artificial intelligence program, the news outlet reported.
По материалам: http://www.planet-today.com/2024/12/openai-whistleblower-found-dead.html