The person mentioned in the posts regarding ChatGPT's status under the First Amendment.
- Click here for it.
A look at his career:
Government service
Baker joined the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice through the Attorney General's Honors Program in 1990 and went on to work as a federal prosecutor with the division's fraud section. In 1996 he joined Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR). This government agency handles all Justice Department requests for surveillance authorizations under the terms of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, advises the Attorney General and all major intelligence-gathering agencies on legal issues relating to national security and surveillance, and "coordinates" the views of the intelligence community regarding intelligence legislation. Baker has often testified before Congress on behalf of Clinton and Bush administration intelligence policies, including defending The Patriot Act before the House Judiciary Committee. Regarding Baker's 2007 appearance on the PBS Frontline episode, "Spying on the Home Front", the show's producer, in a Washington Post online chat, referred to Baker as, "Mr. FISA himself".
In 1998, Baker was promoted to deputy counsel for intelligence operations. From May 2001 he served as acting counsel, and in January 2002 was appointed counsel. In January 2014, he was appointed general counsel of the FBI. As of December 2017, newly appointed director Christopher A. Wray reassigned him from this role with his new duties unclear. On May 4, 2018, Baker resigned from the FBI.
Private sector
Baker's government service was interrupted twice by stints in the private sector. Baker was assistant general counsel for national security at Verizon Business from 2008 to 2009. He was associate general counsel with Bridgewater Associates from 2012 to 2014. He worked as director of National Security and Cybersecurity for the non-partisan, right-center leaning think-tank R Street Institute between January of 2018 and June of 2020.
Baker served as deputy general counsel at Twitter, Inc. from June 2020 to December 2022, until being fired publicly by CEO Elon Musk. Following the disclosure of internal Twitter communications ("Twitter Files") regarding limiting the distribution of a news article concerning materials from Hunter Biden's laptop on the platform in the leadup to the 2020 presidential election, which Twitter at the time falsely cited as a potential violation of its rules regarding hacked materials, Musk expressed concerns about Baker's possible role in its suppression and his alleged interference in the publication of "Twitter Files" as reasons for his termination.