Why Is Soham Parekh Trending? Indian Techie Accused Of Working For Multiple Startups Breaks Down, Gets New Job Offer

Indian techie Soham Parekh went viral after multiple US startups accused him of secretly working for several companies at once. Despite facing backlash, he has now taken a fresh job and is trying to rebuild his career.

author-image
Surya Singh
New Update
Soham Parekh Scandal Indian Techie

Photo Credit: Google Images

Indian engineer Soham Parekh is blowing up online after being accused of working secretly for multiple US startups at the same time. According to Business Today, he allegedly juggled as many as six remote jobs, many from well-known Y Combinator-backed companies. Founders say he used fake resumes, lied about his location, and tricked them into hiring him.

It all kicked off when Playground AI founder Suhail Doshi exposed him on X. Doshi wrote, “PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) who works at 3–4 startups at the same time. He’s been preying on YC companies and more. Beware.”

Doshi later claimed 90% of Parekh’s resume was fake.

Startup Founders Slam Soham Parekh For Fake Resume And Work Ethic

After Doshi’s post, other startup CEOs also shared their experiences. Lindy AI’s Flo Crivello said, “Holy sh*t. We hired this guy a week ago. Fired this morning.”

 

Antimetal’s Matthew Parkhurst told Silicon India that Parekh was “really smart and likeable,” but it didn’t take long to realise he was working multiple jobs. Many others shared the same  'hiring and firing' instance in comments

According to Hindustan Times, Parekh’s resume listed Mumbai University and Georgia Tech as his education, along with jobs at Dynamo AI, Union AI, Synthesia, and Alan AI. But now, founders are questioning how much of it was real.

In private messages shared by Doshi, Parekh sounded broken and regretful. He asked, “Have I completely sabotaged my career? What can I do to improve my situation? I am also happy to come clean.” 

Later, according to Financial Express, he updated his LinkedIn showing a new role as a founding engineer at just one company.

While many people online are criticising Soham Parekh, not everyone feels the same. Conor Brennan-Burke, who runs the AI company HyperSpell, offered him a new job as a second chance. He said, "He's definitely learned his lesson now and is going to work insanely hard to prove everyone wrong. Massive opportunity to bring on top talent with a chip on their shoulder," 

I-9 Verification Loopholes, Remote Work Debate

Because Parekh worked remotely from India, he didn’t have to pass the US I-9 verification, which checks if someone is eligible to work in the US. Business Today says this case exposed a huge loophole in how remote employees are hired, raising big questions about background checks and trust in remote teams.

Despite the criticism, some founders admitted Parekh had real talent but failed ethically. His story has now sparked wide debates on moonlighting, honesty in remote work, and whether startups are checking employees well enough.

Right now, Parekh seems to be trying for a fresh start, but his actions have already shaken the remote work industry.