Advertisement

ByteDance seeks US$1.1 million in damages from ex-intern who sabotaged AI project

Social-media giant ByteDance mentioned the lawsuit in an internal disciplinary notice, which identified the intern by his surname

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
The ByteDance logo is displayed on a smartphone screen in this photo illustration taken March 21, 2024. Photo: Shutterstock Images
Wency Chenin Shanghai

ByteDance, the owner of TikTok and Douyin, filed a lawsuit against a former intern, accusing him of tampering with code and sabotaging an artificial intelligence (AI) training project and demanding 8 million yuan (US$1.1 million) in compensation as well as a public apology, according to a local media report.

Advertisement

The case has already been accepted by the Haidian District Court in Beijing, Chinese media outlet Southern Metropolis Daily reported on Wednesday.

In October, rumours circulated on Chinese social media suggesting that a ByteDance intern’s actions targeting the company’s large language model (LLM) had caused significant damage. At the time, ByteDance clarified that the individual was terminated in August for “maliciously interfering” with a training task.

The Doubao chatbot app is pictured on a smartphone in Beijing, Nov. 12, 2024. Photo: Simon Song
The Doubao chatbot app is pictured on a smartphone in Beijing, Nov. 12, 2024. Photo: Simon Song

However, the company disputed speculation that the disruption involved more than 8,000 graphics processing units and resulted in losses amounting to tens of millions of US dollars, calling such claims exaggerated.

This month, ByteDance included the case in an internal disciplinary notice, which identified the intern, surnamed Tian, as having acted out of dissatisfaction with the team’s resource allocation.

The notice stated that Tian tampered with code to disrupt a research project’s model training work, causing significant waste of resources. The company said it reported Tian’s actions to two professional ethics organisations in China – the Trust and Integrity Enterprise Alliance and the Enterprise Anti-Fraud Alliance – as well as to Tian’s university.

Advertisement

Despite these measures, the former intern repeatedly denied any wrongdoing during the investigations, leading the company to pursue legal action, the Southern Metropolis Daily reported, citing an unnamed internal source.

Advertisement