Elon Musk Basically Accuses Sam Altman of Murdering OpenAI Engineer on (Of Course) Joe Rogan's Podcast
Briefly

Elon Musk Basically Accuses Sam Altman of Murdering OpenAI Engineer on (Of Course) Joe Rogan's Podcast
"We will begin by reminding you that Tesla CEO and ketamine enthusiast Elon Musk is one of the most completely full of shit people on earth. We list below an example of this, where on March 19, 2020 (only into shelter-in-place), Musk declared that there would be close to zero new [COVID] cases in US too by end of April. Whereas in fact, 1.2 million Americans died from, you know, COVID cases following Musk's tweet. Screenshot: @elonmusk via Twitter"
"But billionaire tech bros born into enormous wealth, and dudes who host podcasts, will never admit they are wrong, no matter how thoroughly wrong they are proven. We bring podcasts dudes into this discussion, because Musk appeared on the episode of the Joe Rogan podcast that was posted today. And as KRON4 reports, Musk pretty much accused OpenAI CEO Sam Altman of murdering the company engineer who was found dead in his apartment in San Francisco last year. (That case has been ruled a suicide.)"
"Sherlock Special K told Rogan that he watched Altman in a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, and Musk observed that I don't know if he's guilty, but it's not possible to look more guilty. Wow, sounds ironclad! Musk additionally claimed that he had mutual friends with the 26-year-old engineer (yeah, sure he did) and that People that I know who knew him said he was not suicidal."
Elon Musk appeared on Joe Rogan's podcast and accused OpenAI CEO Sam Altman of murdering Suchir Balaji, an engineer found dead in his San Francisco apartment. Musk said he watched Altman in a Tucker Carlson interview and claimed Altman "looked guilty," adding that friends told him Balaji was not suicidal. The death has been ruled a suicide, and Balaji's parents commissioned a second autopsy but have not released its results. Musk's accusation occurred amid a broader rivalry with Altman and follows Musk's history of making public claims later proven incorrect.
Read at sfist.com
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]