When Cluely, a startup claiming to be building a product that helps people “cheat” on everything, announced that it raised a $15 million Series A financing round from Andreessen Horowitz, some people ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — The CEO was kicked out of one of America’s most prestigious universities and recently had a party at the company office that was busted by the cops. The company’s LinkedIn page ...
Cluely, the controversial AI startup that built its brand around helping users secretly “cheat” during job interviews and meetings, is now facing a credibility crisis of its own. On Thursday, ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. An Ivy Leaguer just released an AI app that can feed live answers to users, so I decided to put it to ...
How do you cheat at a conversation? This could have been a Zen koan, in different times. In the unfortunate times we live in, it is the question driving an artificial-intelligence tool called Cluely.
On Friday, mega venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz announced investment in a startup called Cluely Inc., a company whose motto is “Cheat at Everything.” Cluely sells what it refers to as a ...
The latest San Francisco startup culture drama happened on Monday night. And it centered around “the most legendary party that never happened,” Cluely founder and CEO Roy Lee tells TechCrunch. Cluely ...
Cluely, the AI startup that promised to help people "cheat on everything," is betting big on high compensation to recruit top-tier talent. Chungin "Roy" Lee, the CEO and cofounder of Cluely, wrote on ...
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Cluely CEO Chungin "Roy" Lee is again in the headlines, but this time not for his app, but because of his beliefs. In a ...