America: Indian engineer Suchir Balaji, who raised questions on CHATGPT, died, body found in home

Suchir Balaji, a former researcher at OpenAI, the artificial intelligence company that developed ChatGPT, has been found dead in his flat. The death of Suchir Balaji, who raised serious questions about OpenAI, was discovered by the San Francisco Police on November 26 and came to light to the whole world today.
Officials said Suchir Balaji (26) was found dead in his flat in Buchanan, San Francisco. According to foreign media, the police suspect that Suchir Balaji has committed suicide and there are no signs of foul play.
Police found him dead in the flat.
Suchir Balaji was not talking to his friends, after which his friends and colleagues became worried and informed the police about this. San Francisco Police reached Balaji's Lower Heights residence around 1 pm on November 26. Officers found Suchir's body in the flat.
Officers and medical teams arrived at the scene and found a man dead in what appeared to be a suicide. Initial investigations have found no signs of foul play, police said.
Questions were raised on OpenAI.
Three months before his death, Suchir Balaji publicly claimed that OpenAI had violated US copyright law. Open AI created ChatGPT and it is enjoying massive commercial success with millions of users globally.
The launch of this app in late 2022 gave rise to several legal challenges from the authors. At that time, many writers, programmers and journalists had alleged that the company had illegally used their copyrighted content to develop its app.
While giving an interview to foreign media on October 23, Balaji had argued that OpenAI was having a negative impact on the businesses and entrepreneurs who have been used to acquire information to train ChatGPT. He said, if you believe what I say, then you have to leave the company. He also said, “This is not a sustainable model for the Internet ecosystem.