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            "text": "# The Archive of Human Candor: Zoë Hitzig's Resignation and the Advertising Model's Record Dependency"
          },
          {
            "text": "Counterpose | CP-4 | February 11, 2026"
          },
          {
            "text": "A publication of Vega Commons Project, Inc."
          },
          {
            "text": "---"
          },
          {
            "text": "On February 11, 2026, former OpenAI researcher Zoë Hitzig published a resignation op-ed in the New York Times, leaving over the company's decision to test advertisements in ChatGPT. Hitzig described the dataset of user conversations as an \"archive of human candor,\" noting that users have shared medical fears, relationship problems, and religious beliefs. She argued that building an advertising engine on this dataset creates manipulation potential that society lacks tools to address."
          },
          {
            "text": "A custody surface is the set of records an AI system generates during operation that can be discovered, subpoenaed, or compelled through legal process. An interaction record is the log of what a user asked, what the system responded, and any reasoning the system performed. Hitzig's characterization of AI conversation logs as an \"archive of human candor\" is a precise description of the record category that custody governance addresses. Users disclose information to AI systems that they would not disclose to other humans, in settings they perceive as private, on infrastructure that retains those disclosures under vendor-controlled terms."
          },
          {
            "text": "The resignation is an industry insider validation of a structural condition: the same interaction records that create the advertising opportunity also create the custody exposure. Advertising requires retention, because targeting depends on knowing what the user discussed. Retention creates discoverability, because records that exist on reachable infrastructure can be compelled. The advertising model and the custody surface are the same data viewed from different institutional perspectives."
          },
          {
            "text": "Hitzig's \"archive of human candor\" framing confirms from within the industry that the governance gap is recognized by the people building the systems. The question her resignation raises is whether that recognition will produce governance architecture or whether it will remain a reason talented researchers leave companies whose business models depend on the gap remaining open."
          },
          {
            "text": "---"
          },
          {
            "text": "## Sources"
          },
          {
            "text": "| Source | Date | Description | URL |\n|--------|------|-------------|-----|\n| Zoë Hitzig, New York Times op-ed | February 11, 2026 | Resignation over ChatGPT advertising |  |"
          },
          {
            "text": "---"
          },
          {
            "text": "## Amendment Log"
          },
          {
            "text": "*No amendments to date.*"
          },
          {
            "text": "---"
          },
          {
            "text": "The observations presented reflect analytical assessment of publicly available information and do not constitute legal, insurance, or investment advice. Counterpose maintains no formal relationship with any vendor, regulator, or standards body referenced in this publication."
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