The curious case of Suchir Balaji
Marco van Hurne
AI & ML advisory | Author of The Machine Learning Book of Knowledge | Building AI skills & organizations | Data Science | Data Governance | AI Compliance Officer | AI Governance
Ladies and gentlemen, gather thy tinfoil hats, for the conspiracies await, and prepare for a tale drenched in intrigue.
And no, this story is not featuring Brad Pitt - that was in “Benjamin Button”. The protagonist in this case aged rather normally yet, sadly, did not make it 'till the credits….
This is the story of Suchir Balaji. He was a 26-year-old programming wunderbursche who turned into a whistleblower. Good for him! But what was not so good, is that he was found dead in his San Francisco apartment on November 26.
The official line the cops came up with: No evidence of foul play.
The unofficial murmurs, however…
Let’s just say the plot thickens faster than your AI can spit out lies.
Now, our protagonist, Balaji, was a promising researcher at ……OpenAI. And as you all know, Sam A. is rumored to be a member of the Illuminati and allegedly is a shapeshifting lizard. And Balaji had accused his employer of using copyrighted material to train its darling product, ChatGPT.
Oh no !
So he IS a shapeshifting lizard ?!?!
No, not that.
I was referring to the IP of people they stole...
Did they steal the intellectual property of us publishers, writers, and creatives?!?!
We were not aware!
The shock!
The horror!
And his claims includede a lot of evidence and they were published just a few weeks before his untimely death. In it he pictured a systemic disregard for the law. And then, as if on cue……he was gone.
Was it coincidence?
Sure, if you do not believe in the power of statistics.
More tabloid schtuff after the commercial brake:
From prodigy to Silicon Valley dissident
Balaji was a programming phenom, and he earned a place in the top tier of a global coding competition. He was raking in six-figure winnings, and securing a much coveted spot at OpenAI in 2020. And for a few years, he worked on the very backbone of ChatGPT, where he was gathering and organizing data which was scraped from the depths of the internet.
But when ChatGPT’s star rose, Balaji’s conscience began to feel more and more like heartburn. And by 2024, he could no longer reconcile his ideals with OpenAI’s practices.
He left the company under the pretense that their reliance on copyrighted material was legally, ummmm….. dubious? And also corrosive to the internet’s ecosystem.
So he started to ventilate warnings to people working at OpenAI, andhe was blunt: this is not innovation y’all. This is exploitation in a shiny new UX.
And Balaji was found dead, just a day after he was being named in a court filing that implicated him in a major copyright lawsuit against OpenAI.
The timing couldn’t be more suspicious.
David versus Goliath
Of course, Balaji’s accusations struck a nerve in the tech world.
He mentioned that OpenAI’s ChatGPT was trained on a data cocktail that included publicly available information AND also copyrighted material which was scraped under dubious circumstances, and without authorization. His concern was that AI systems like ChatGPT were essentially parasitic, and that they were siphoning value from creators and businesses without giving anything back.
Ummm, yup!
Hi every other leachin sons of ____: Copyright infringements by all major AI players
And he wasn’t alone, you know.
Writers, journalists, and even news publishers had begun filing lawsuits against OpenAI and its hoodlum partner, Microsoft. They were all accusing them of using their own intellectual property to train their models. But Balaji’s voice was unique, because it was an insider’s perspective, His voice cut through corporate speak like a jackknife.
And OpenAI of course denied the allegations for its part. They hid themselves behind the shield of “fair use”, and they were ignoring the shadiness of that claim. Their official stance was that they “were innovators, and not thieves”.
But their unofficial stance was that they "were too big to fail, and we know it".
A death wrapped in mystery
The official cause of Balaji’s death is still undisclosed, but authorities have ruled out foul play.
So, tell us what DID happen to Balaji?
Because, let’s not kid ourselves: This is Silicon Valley. And the stakes of these companies are as high as the egos and secrets that are buried deeper than $hawk coin cryptocurrency scams. And you definitely do not want a whistleblower with intimate knowledge of OpenAI’s inner workings.
And now he is laid to rest, just as legal proceedings are heating up.If you’re not raising an eyebrow, then you’re not paying attention.
Balaji’s story, to me is about the human cost of unchecked ambition in the tech world. It’s about ethics of AI and also about the broader system that chews up talent and spits it out when it becomes inconvenient.
Bye programmers! laughs Amazon.
Gone woke game developers, says Elon.
Huh, where’s our Python division gone? says Klarna
Sam Altman and the new world order
Ok, put on that tin-foil hat now you've been making all along while you read my schtuff.
Ready now?
Check !
So, what of Sam Altman, our ever so enigmatic yet stiff figurehead of OpenAI?
To some, he is a visionary, who is guiding humanity into the AI age. And I kind off agree. But to others, he is a shadowy figure whose empire is built on the backs of exploited data and silenced dissenters. And I kind off agree too. Is he merely a brilliant entrepreneur? Or does his influence stretch into the murky realms of conspiracy? The lizard-people whispers might be hyperbole, but his role in this unfolding drama is far from benign.
Case in point: the Orb.
That is Altman’s latest project, and it promises to save the internet from nasty bots that are harassing websites, by …………scanning your iris.
It is being branded as a revolutionary tool to verify people online, but the Orb is actually part of his Worldcoin project. And that is a scheme that is not so much about altruism but more about cementing a new World Order. King Herod gives you seven shiny silverlings in exchange for your soul, well, your iris, at least.
And Altman keeps on spinning this as the first step toward a Universal Basic Income, but skeptics see a not-so-subtle blueprint for the “Great Reset”, behind his lofty goals. And the great reset is about a future where privacy is the currency we all lose.
Hello Social Credits project USA/EU edition.
We are halfway there!
Do you think that the Orb is a harmless innovation, or the keystone of Altman’s biometric empire? A ticket to a utopian safety net, or the foundation of a surveillance-driven New World Order?
You decide.
Just don’t blink, because you wouldn’t want the Orb to miss your iris.
Now, Suchir Balaji’s death may have been officially labeled as a tragedy, but its timing and circumstances are just chilling, and they are a commentary on the cutthroat world of AI development. He may have been a victim of his own demons or something far more darker, but I think that his story is a warning to anyone that is willing to listen.
His final warnings rings louder now than ever: the internet is being hollowed out, and transformed into a training ground for AI systems that mimic creativity without embodying it.
Signing off from the underbelly of Silicon Valley, where tinfoil hats are standard issue and coincidences are rarer than ethical billionaires,
Marco
Well, that’s a wrap for today. Tomorrow, I’ll have a fresh episode of TechTonic Shifts for you. If you enjoy my writing and want to support my work, feel free to buy me a coffee ??
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To keep you doomscrolling ??
Let’s add AWS, Azure and GCP here. People’s stuff is on their severs. While it can be more comfortable to some extent (unless Microsoft do not deploy a wrong network configuration taking down the whole region again, and other similar stuff), cost-effiency is often not the case anymore, but still businesses go there and use it. I sincerely, from all the heart, do not believe that these huge companies are not using at all the data that are on their servers. I was suspicious about that stuff since I’m working with IT infrastructure, and then 2020 came and to Parler happened what happened, I was thinking that big tech will wait a bit before revealing that they really are ABLE to do it, but no. In one of the Captain America movies there was something like: “People would lose the freedom for their security.” And this Howard Stark’s dream city which is extremely safe because of total control… So much is coming true so fast. I remebered the Person of Interest series, guy created a social media exactly to gather info about people :) As for whistleblowers, they should go to some safer place before revealing something serious about companies.
Working on AI for the future of expertise
2 个月Normally I don’t like conspiracy theories… but this one should scare everybody. AIs always try to spit something out about “ethical AI”and “the human element” whenever they can. But the fact is they are trained on stolen IP - with the goal of replacing the people they steal from. I’m obviously not AI adverse - but too few people stand to benefit and too many people stand to lose as it is now.
Seasoned (IT) entrepreneur
2 个月Any thoughts how to keep these huge AI machines “on a decent track”, if Google, Microsoft, Elon and others throw so much money at it?
Head of ML/AI at SilkData | AI Consulting & Architecture | NLP, Document AI | Scientific Computing | Python | Lead Developer | Mentor | PhD in Physics
2 个月I believe that many things like copyright and the nature of jobs will soon change. And, if you compare this with early 20th century, when farmers and transportation switched from horses to tractors and cars, it can be a disaster for many people and businesses. I only hope our society are more mature since that time...