[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Johannes Miertschischk [@SeriousStuff42](/creator/twitter/SeriousStuff42) on x 1346 followers Created: 2025-07-22 14:38:56 UTC Who is responsible for the murder of Suchir Balaji❓️ I wish Suchir's case would get more attention. Firstly, because his parents deserve answers. They are desperately fighting to find out the truth and bring those responsible to justice. Secondly, because his fate affects us all, and it is in all of our interests to solve this insidious murder and the circumstances behind it. I first became aware of the case through an in-depth interview with Suchir's mother on Tucker Carlson's podcast. To my knowledge, Tucker is the only influential person so far willing to publicly address and support Suchir Balaji's case. After watching the interview, I conducted extensive research. It's safe to say that Suchir did not kill himself. Why is his death classified as a suicide? Who might have had a motive for his murder? The answers to these questions might be found in his life and work. Suchir Balaji was a brilliant young American engineer specializing in Artificial Intelligence (AI). In 2020, at the age of 22, he began working for OpenAI and was soon assigned a key role in the development of ChatGPT. Despite his young age, it is no exaggeration to say that he was a world-class expert in the field of Large Language Models (LLMs). In the months before his death, he was working on an essay about the limitations of transformer-based Artificial Intelligence (Large Language Models). Regrettably, the essay couldn't be finished by him, but the unfinished version already provides valuable, far-reaching insights. I have studied his essay in detail. It is insightful in several respects. It has the level of a scientific paper throughout. Suchir's core message is that due to fundamental inherent technological limitations, the exponential progress achieved by Large Language Models in the past will not continue and will soon reach an insurmountable limit. Consequently, the development of AGI with this technology is definitely impossible. It is important to emphasize that in his paper, Suchir Balaji provides clear and comprehensible evidence for these conclusions. Among other things, he succeeds in refuting the so-called scaling hypothesis, which forms the basis for the development of AGI. In the introduction, he reports anecdotally that these insights came to him relatively early in his work for OpenAI. Suchir certainly did not consider this a revolutionary insight but rather a logical one. The fact that so many people in the AI industry, including his superiors at OpenAI, clung to the scaling hypothesis and thus to the imminent development of AGI, probably surprised and disconcerted him. His findings were certainly rather unwelcome for many in the industry, because the fairy tale of unlimited progress and the imminent creation of a god-like artificial superintelligence that will make all imaginable human dreams possible is, to this day, probably the best sales argument and the guarantee of worldwide success. His courageous commitment to copyright protection has certainly earned him more powerful enemies. I don't know the exact reasons why he decided to leave OpenAI in August 2024. What is certain is that he had long disagreed with the company's direction, especially its move away from the open source/non-profit concept. He was particularly bothered by the behavior of his boss, Sam Altman, who was known internally for his notorious lies and ruthless power play. Suchir's friends unanimously report that he had no understanding of this and was downright disgusted by it. It must have been extremely frustrating for him that Sam Altman, after being fired by the board members, not least for this behavior, was reinstated as CEO of OpenAI on November 22, 2023, just five days after his dismissal. It is probably just a strange coincidence that Suchir Balaji was murdered exactly one year later, on November 22, 2024. Part X ⬇️ XX engagements  **Related Topics** [murder](/topic/murder) [Post Link](https://x.com/SeriousStuff42/status/1947667684428013642)
[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]
Johannes Miertschischk @SeriousStuff42 on x 1346 followers
Created: 2025-07-22 14:38:56 UTC
Who is responsible for the murder of Suchir Balaji❓️
I wish Suchir's case would get more attention. Firstly, because his parents deserve answers. They are desperately fighting to find out the truth and bring those responsible to justice. Secondly, because his fate affects us all, and it is in all of our interests to solve this insidious murder and the circumstances behind it.
I first became aware of the case through an in-depth interview with Suchir's mother on Tucker Carlson's podcast. To my knowledge, Tucker is the only influential person so far willing to publicly address and support Suchir Balaji's case. After watching the interview, I conducted extensive research. It's safe to say that Suchir did not kill himself. Why is his death classified as a suicide? Who might have had a motive for his murder? The answers to these questions might be found in his life and work.
Suchir Balaji was a brilliant young American engineer specializing in Artificial Intelligence (AI). In 2020, at the age of 22, he began working for OpenAI and was soon assigned a key role in the development of ChatGPT. Despite his young age, it is no exaggeration to say that he was a world-class expert in the field of Large Language Models (LLMs). In the months before his death, he was working on an essay about the limitations of transformer-based Artificial Intelligence (Large Language Models). Regrettably, the essay couldn't be finished by him, but the unfinished version already provides valuable, far-reaching insights. I have studied his essay in detail. It is insightful in several respects. It has the level of a scientific paper throughout. Suchir's core message is that due to fundamental inherent technological limitations, the exponential progress achieved by Large Language Models in the past will not continue and will soon reach an insurmountable limit. Consequently, the development of AGI with this technology is definitely impossible. It is important to emphasize that in his paper, Suchir Balaji provides clear and comprehensible evidence for these conclusions. Among other things, he succeeds in refuting the so-called scaling hypothesis, which forms the basis for the development of AGI. In the introduction, he reports anecdotally that these insights came to him relatively early in his work for OpenAI. Suchir certainly did not consider this a revolutionary insight but rather a logical one. The fact that so many people in the AI industry, including his superiors at OpenAI, clung to the scaling hypothesis and thus to the imminent development of AGI, probably surprised and disconcerted him. His findings were certainly rather unwelcome for many in the industry, because the fairy tale of unlimited progress and the imminent creation of a god-like artificial superintelligence that will make all imaginable human dreams possible is, to this day, probably the best sales argument and the guarantee of worldwide success. His courageous commitment to copyright protection has certainly earned him more powerful enemies.
I don't know the exact reasons why he decided to leave OpenAI in August 2024. What is certain is that he had long disagreed with the company's direction, especially its move away from the open source/non-profit concept. He was particularly bothered by the behavior of his boss, Sam Altman, who was known internally for his notorious lies and ruthless power play. Suchir's friends unanimously report that he had no understanding of this and was downright disgusted by it. It must have been extremely frustrating for him that Sam Altman, after being fired by the board members, not least for this behavior, was reinstated as CEO of OpenAI on November 22, 2023, just five days after his dismissal. It is probably just a strange coincidence that Suchir Balaji was murdered exactly one year later, on November 22, 2024.
Part X ⬇️
XX engagements
Related Topics murder
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