logo
Have you hired software developer Soham Parekh yet?

Have you hired software developer Soham Parekh yet?

Minta day ago
A few days ago, Soham Parekh was just another full-stack developer.
Then his name began surfacing across founder circles: Hacker News threads, Slack channels, Twitter jokes, Reddit threads. One YC-backed startup after another realized they'd hired him. Not in sequence—at the same time.
Some found out after a few weeks. One team said he worked with them for nearly a year. The stories converge on the same arc: stellar interviews, fast onboarding, some early output. Then missed meetings. Odd excuses. Gaps in availability. In one case, Soham turned up for a trial in person, then left halfway through the day, saying he had to meet a lawyer.
He didn't disappear. He just kept showing up somewhere else.
The question isn't how he got away with it. The question is why it was so easy.
Soham Parekh is not the first engineer to work multiple jobs in parallel. In November 2022, Vanity Fair published a piece titled 'Overemployed in Silicon Valley: How Scores of Tech Workers Are Secretly Juggling Multiple Jobs." It told of engineers quietly holding down two, three, even four full-time roles. Some used mouse-jigglers to fake activity. Others ran multiple laptops. One admitted to outsourcing work to Fiverr. A few worked in coordinated Discord communities, sharing tactics.
'I'm not sure if they even know I'm here anymore," one engineer told the reporter. 'All my paychecks are still coming in."
At the time, it read like a side effect of the remote-work boom. A strange consequence of too many laptops and not enough oversight. Soham didn't need any of that infrastructure. He used his real name. Real resume. Showed up on video calls. Wrote code. Left a trail. He just moved through the system cleanly.
What his story shows is how little it takes to get hired—and stay hired.
One startup said he 'crushed the interviews." Another called him 'top 0.1%." Founders praised his GitHub, his side projects, his email follow-ups. They only saw the red flags once the real work began. That gap—between performance in a vetting process and actual engagement—isn't incidental. It's structural.
Startups, especially ones chasing growth, have narrowed hiring into structured calls and take-home tasks. Processes are recycled across founder networks. Culture fit becomes a checkbox. Most of the time, it comes down to gut feel. Which is just another way of saying: we don't really know. In that kind of system, someone who interviews well and ships enough can coast for months. If that person is also working three other jobs, the signs fade gradually. By the time someone notices, it's already awkward to ask.
There's another wrinkle. Soham may not have been doing anything that couldn't be done today by an AI agent.
More than one founder joked—what if he was a bot?
That question no longer lands as satire. Agents today can write code, answer support tickets, even joke in Slack. At some point, you stop noticing the difference.
And if you can't tell whether you're working with a disengaged employee or a competent script—what exactly are you hiring?
We've seen this fragility before.
In 2022, Wipro fired 300 employees for 'moonlighting." Chairman Rishad Premji called it 'cheating—plain and simple." The company said some were working for competitors. The backlash was swift. Critics pointed out that many executives sit on multiple boards. Others questioned the demand for loyalty from a system that rarely offers the same in return.
That episode surfaced a buried truth: the rules of work have changed. Expectations haven't.
Soham Parekh is a consequence of that mismatch. He's not a rogue actor. He's the product of a hiring culture that values performance over presence, delivery over connection. A culture that claims to build teams but rarely asks who's actually part of them.
So what happens when the next Soham is indistinguishable from an AI agent?
Srikanth Nadhamuni, the former CTO of Aadhaar, believes we'll need to rethink identity itself. In a recent paper, he proposed Personhood Credentials—a cryptographic and biometric framework to prove that a person behind a digital interaction is real, unique, and singular.
The concept sounds abstract, even dystopian. But Nadhamuni argues that in a world of deepfakes and synthetic voice agents, systems like Aadhaar—originally built for public verification—could help anchor digital interactions to actual humans. He describes it as a privacy-preserving firewall against the collapse of trust online.
It raises real questions. About privacy, about exclusion, about the kind of infrastructure we're willing to accept in the name of certainty. But it also names the thing most companies pretend not to see: if you don't know who's on the other side of the screen, you're not hiring a person. You're hiring a pattern.
And if Soham Parekh passed every test and still wasn't who we thought he was—what happens when the next Soham isn't even human?
Pankaj Mishra is a journalist and co-founder of FactorDaily.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Over 26,800 perform Amarnath Yatra in 2 days, another batch of 6,979 leave for Valley
Over 26,800 perform Amarnath Yatra in 2 days, another batch of 6,979 leave for Valley

Hans India

timean hour ago

  • Hans India

Over 26,800 perform Amarnath Yatra in 2 days, another batch of 6,979 leave for Valley

Another batch of 6,979 Yatris left Jammu on Saturday for Kashmir amid tight security arrangements to perform pilgrimage to the Amarnath shrine as more than 26,800 pilgrims had 'Darshan' during the last two days, officials said. The officials added that more than 26,800 pilgrims had 'darshan' inside the holy cave shrine cave during the last two days since the 38-day-long Amarnath Yatra started on July 3. "Another batch of 6,979 pilgrims left Bhagwati Nagar Yatra Niwas in the morning in two escorted convoys of 312 vehicles for the Valley." "Of these, 2,753 are going to Baltal base camp while 4,226 pilgrims are going to Nunwan (Pahalgam base camp)," officials added. Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor, Manoj Sinha, inaugurated a Yatri Niwas in Baltal base camp on Friday. The complex includes a disaster management centre. Part of the ONGC's corporate social responsibility (CSR) project, Baltal Yatri Niwas has become functional while those in Bijbehara, Nunwan (Pahalgam) and Sidhra in Jammu are nearing completion. These locations feature dormitories, sewage treatment plants, and other essential utilities. The Sidhra site (8,500 square metres), designed as a sustainable G+5 structure equipped with solar panels, is expected to be operational by September 2026. Collectively, these projects, covering over 30,955 square metres, will provide safer and more comfortable facilities for the people. Authorities have left no stone unturned in providing a multi-tier cover to this year's Amarnath Yatra, as this takes place after the cowardly attack of April 22 in which Pakistan-backed terrorists killed 26 civilians after segregating them on the basis of faith in Baisaran meadow of Pahalgam. An additional 180 companies of Central Armed Police Forces have been brought in to augment the existing strength of the Army, Border Security Force, Central Reserve Police Force, Sashastra Seema Bal, and the local police. All the transit camps en route to the two base camps and the entire route from Bhagwati Nagar Yatri Niwas in Jammu to the cave shrine are secured by the security forces. Locals have extended complete cooperation to this year's Amarnath Yatra as they have always done in the past. To send out a powerful signal that Kashmiris were deeply shocked by the Pahalgam terror attack, locals were the first to welcome the first batch of Yatris with garlands and placards as the pilgrims crossed the Navyug Tunnel to enter the Valley at Qazigund. This year, the Yatra started on July 3 and will end after 38 days on August 9, coinciding with Shravan Purnima and Raksha Bandhan. Yatris approach the holy cave shrine situated 3,888 metres above sea level in the Kashmir Himalayas either from the traditional Pahalgam route or the shorter Baltal route. Those using the Pahalgam route have to pass through Chandanwari, Sheshnag and Panchtarni to reach the cave shrine, covering a distance of 46 km on foot. This trek takes a pilgrim four days to reach the cave shrine. Those using the shorter Baltal route have to trek 14 km to reach the cave shrine and return to the base camp the same day after performing the Yatra. For security reasons, no helicopter services are available to the Yatris this year. The cave shrine houses an ice stalagmite structure that wanes and waxes with the phases of the moon. Devotees believe that the ice stalagmite structure symbolises the mythical powers of Lord Shiva. Shri Amarnath ji Yatra is one of the holiest religious pilgrimages for the devotees, as legend says Lord Shiva narrated the secrets of eternal life and immortality to Mata Parvati inside this cave. Two pigeons accidentally happened to be inside the cave when the eternal secrets were being narrated by Lord Shiva. Traditionally, even to this day, a pair of mountain pigeons flies out of the cave shrine when the annual Yatra begins.

LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman asks question about Soham Parekh, gets response from techie
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman asks question about Soham Parekh, gets response from techie

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman asks question about Soham Parekh, gets response from techie

As news of Soham Parekh , an Indian software engineer, who has been publicly accused of working for several US startups at the same time, spread fast on social media, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman joined the discussion on X (the app formerly known as Twitter). He posed a question for his followers, with many people responding to the post and Parekh himself chimed in with a reply. 'What do you think Soham Parekh's LinkedIn header is?,' Hoffman asked. Amid scores of responses, Parekh's reply stood out. 'I don't have a LinkedIn,' he said. Soham Parekh responds to 'Moonlighting' claims Parekh publicly addressed the viral allegations of him simultaneously working for multiple US startups, defending his actions and announcing a new, exclusive role. The controversy was sparked by a public "exposé" from Silicon Valley entrepreneur Suhail Doshi . by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Is your tinnitus getting worse? Do this immediately (Watch) Hearing Magazine Undo Responding directly to Suhail Doshi's initial social media post, Soham Parekh took to X (formerly Twitter) to share his side of the story. "There's a lot being said about me right now, and most of you don't know the full story," Parekh wrote. "If there's one thing to know about me, it's that I love to build. That's it." He added that he has "been isolated, written off, and shut out by nearly everyone I've known and every company I've worked at." Despite these claims of rejection, Parekh affirmed his commitment: "Building is the only thing I've ever truly known, and it's what I'll keep doing." Parekh announced he has signed an exclusive deal as a founding engineer with a single company in the video AI space, which is set to launch later this month. He concluded his public statement with a defiant tone, adding, "I'm pissed. And I've got something to prove." AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

"I Was Pissed": Founder Reveals How Hiring Soham Parekh Drained His Resources
"I Was Pissed": Founder Reveals How Hiring Soham Parekh Drained His Resources

NDTV

time11 hours ago

  • NDTV

"I Was Pissed": Founder Reveals How Hiring Soham Parekh Drained His Resources

A tech startup founder who hired Soham Parekh has shared his experience of working with the infamous Silicon Valley engineer who has gone viral for moonlighting at multiple US-based startups. Dhruv Amin, co-founder of Create, an artificial intelligence (AI) "text-to-app" builder, reflected on how hiring Soham was a costly decision that drained his startup's time, resources and energy. "Yes, we hired him. We're building an AI agent in San Francisco. He was eng #5. Recommended by a recruiter, which lent legitimacy. He was eager and crushed our in-person pair programming onsite. I believe he's actually a good engineer," wrote Dhruv on X (formerly Twitter). While Parekh provided references, Dhruv offered him the job, awaiting responses from the previous employers. He also briefly perused Parekh's LinkedIn, GitHub, open source commits and blog posts to get an idea about the employee they were onboarding. After accepting the job offer, Parekh said he had a New York trip planned and that he would start after a week. "He went dark the next week (strange) but texted on weekend excited for Monday. His first day at 9:30 am he calls in sick (strange). Said he'd onboard from home. Gave an address to ship the laptop," said Dhruv. our soham parekh story: - yes, we hired him. we're building an AI agent in SF. he was eng #5. - recommended by a recruiter, which lent legitimacy. - he was eager and crushed our in person pair programming onsite. i believe he's actually a good engineer. - some have said "this… — Dhruv (@dhruvtruth) July 3, 2025 'I was pissed' What followed was an elaborate gaslighting scheme where Parekh frequently excused himself from turning up at the office and delayed shipping the projects. Dhruv and his colleagues also found that Parekh was working at another company. "When we called Soham up, he denied it to the end. Said Sync guys were just friends. Either way, we were out. In an ironic twist of fate Sync dropped an employee of the month video the same day that featured none other than Soham." After terminating his contract, Parekh simply 'dipped' as per Dhruv, who assumed he was a young kid who had made a mistake. "It was embarrassing until yesterday when I realised how widespread it was. Then I was pissed. then impressed. Still not sure how he pulled it off for so long with in-person startups with long hours, but appreciated the hustle. Hope he had a good reason. Feels like a stressful way to make money." After the controversy snowballed, Parekh responded, saying, "I'm not proud of what I've done. But, you know, financial circumstances, essentially. No one really likes to work 140 hours a week, right? But I had to do this out of necessity. I was in extremely dire financial circumstances". He also added that he did all the work without the assistance of AI or other engineers. Parekh has also announced that he has taken up a job at an AI firm, Darwin, a new startup based in San Francisco in the United States. He also clarified that he will not be taking up any more additional jobs

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store