
Former Openai staff, Suchir Balaji, was found to have died in San Francisco apartment on November 26. On Friday, the city’s medical prosecutor responded to the doubt of the family, which caused a wide range of speculation online, ruling his death as a suicide.
Balaji made a headline in October, accusing Openai for illegally used copyrighted data to train the AI model in October. He publicly shared his concern and provided information to NEW York Times, and later he was named a key figure with “unique and related documents” in a newspaper lawsuit against Openai. His revelation came out between more and more publishers and artists.
A few days before his death, according to his parents, he celebrated his 26th birthday and planned a non -profit organization in machine learning. He suddenly attracted attention from figures such as Elon Musk and Tucker Carlson, and Representative Kanna demanded a “complete and transparent investigation.”
In fact, according to a report by the San Francisco County Medical Inspector, the death of its own death was the focus of the debate on the risks faced by AI ethics, corporate responsibility and internal accusers of Silicon Valley. Whether these things will be separated are now left.