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American CTO shares 'his story' of Soham Parekh: Indian techie used to ...

American CTO shares 'his story' of Soham Parekh: Indian techie used to ...

Time of India12 hours ago
Soham Parekh
An Indian software engineer
Soham Parekh
has been accused of
moonlighting
practices at multiple US startups simultaneously. Now, another American starts has shared a cautionary tale involving the techie. An
American CTO
has accused the Indian software engineer of emotionally manipulating him during the height of
Operation Sindoor
.
American CTO shares 'his story' of Soham Parekh Arkadiy Telegin
Arkadiy Telegin, founder and CTO of
AI firm Leaping AI
, shared a screenshot of his conversation with Shoam Parekh on social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter). Telegin shared screenshots of messages from Parekh, who claimed a drone had been shot down '10 minutes away' from his home during the conflict. The messages, sent at 2:29 a.m., appeared to suggest Parekh was in a war zone. However, it was later revealed he was in Mumbai, far from the active conflict areas.
'He used to guilt-trip me for being slow on pull requests while claiming to be in a conflict zone,' Telegin wrote. 'Next person should hire him as Chief Intelligence Officer.'
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Undo
The issue of Soham Parekh moonlighting at various US startup escalated when other startup founders chimed in. Flo Crivello (Lindy), Matthew Parkhurst (Antimetal), Nicolai Ouporov (Fleet AI), and Adish Jain (Mosaic) all revealed that Parekh had worked at their companies—often simultaneously—and performed exceptionally well in interviews.
Soham Parekh confesses to moonlighting at Silicon Valley startups
Soham Parekh has publicly admitted to working at multiple Silicon Valley startups simultaneously after being exposed in a viral social media post, claiming
financial desperation
drove his controversial employment scheme.
"It is true," Parekh confirmed in a TBPN interview when asked about allegations of holding multiple full-time jobs. "I'm not proud of what I've done. That's not something I endorse either. But no one really likes to work 140 hours a week, I had to do it out of necessity."
Parekh attributed his actions to severe financial circumstances rather than greed. "I was in extremely dire financial circumstances," he explained in the interview. "I'm not a very people person. I don't share much about what's going on in my life. So I just thought: if I work multiple places, maybe I can elevate myself out of the situation faster."
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