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Stephen Downes shares news that Cluely, a startup promising that you can “cheat on everything” is proving controversial. As he says, the company “leans heavily into the ‘cheating’ aspect of the service, which is producing a not unexpected visceral reaction on the part of pundits.”

I tried Rewind.ai (currently rebranding to ‘Limitless’) when Paul Stamatiou was a co-founder. Instead of talking about “cheating” and creating socially awkward videos, Rewind.ai talks of being a “personalized AI powered by everything you’ve seen, said, or heard.” Well, so long as it happens on your computer. Presumably these people don’t go outside.

In my experience, startups get attention and traction by being genuinely useful and unique (very rare!), because there’s a big name attached to them (common), or because they’re socially transgressive. It feels to me like we’re seeing more of the latter at the moment, including Mechanize which, somewhat laughably, believes that their “total addressable market” is “$60 trillion a year.”

That’s not to say that automation of many so-called “white collar” tasks isn’t possible or desirable. Just not by tech bros, thank you very much. I’d encourage you to read Fully Automated Luxury Communism for a more radical socialist look at how all this could play out.

On Sunday, 21-year-old Chungin “Roy” Lee announced he’s raised $5.3 million in seed funding from Abstract Ventures and Susa Ventures for his startup, Cluely, that offers an AI tool to “cheat on everything.”

The startup was born after Lee posted in a viral X thread that he was suspended by Columbia University after he and his co-founder developed a tool to cheat on job interviews for software engineers.

That tool, originally called Interview Coder, is now part of their San Francisco-based startup Cluely. It offers its users the chance to “cheat” on things like exams, sales calls, and job interviews thanks to a hidden in-browser window that can’t be viewed by the interviewer or test giver.

Cluely has published a manifesto comparing itself to inventions like the calculator and spellcheck, which were originally derided as “cheating.”

Source: TechCrunch

Image: Mohamed Nohassi