Cluly, the launch of AI, which uses the hidden browser window for analyzing online conversations, fired fame with a controversial claim that its function “undetectability” allows users to “cheat everything”.
The co -founder of the company, Roy Lee, was suspended on Columbia University for bragging that he used Cruly, originally called intelligence, to “cheat” in the coding test when he applied for programmers in Amazon.
On Tuesday, one other student of the University of Columbia, Patrick Shen, announced on X that he built ReallyThe product is designed to assist catch “cheaters” who use Clula. Marketing alone as “anti-made”, he really claims that it will probably detect the use of unauthorized applications by interlocutors or others during online meetings.
But the premiere of Trely did not mason Lee.
“We don’t care if we can be detected or not,” Techcrunch said Lee last week. “The invisibility function is not a basic feature of Clula. This is a clever addition. In fact, most enterprises decide on completely excluded invisibility due to legal consequences.”
Lee replied to Shen at X, praising really, but adding that “Cluly” will probably begin to guide our users to much more transparent in terms of use. “
Since the security of series A in the amount of $ 15 million from Andreessen Horowitz last month, Cluely has been a marketing strategy since promoting “fraud”. The company’s slogan has recently been modified from “Cheat on everything” to “everything you need. Before you ask. … it seems to cheat.”
Cluly marketing tactics have been described as marketing of rage, and now plainly the company has collected us to think about its technology as a cheating tool.
However, Lee has much greater ambitions: take chatgpt.
“Every time you reach for chatgpt.com, our goal is to create a world where you reach for a codec instead,” Lee said. “Cluly does functionally the same as chatgpt. The only difference is that he also knows what is on the screen and hears what is happening in your sound.”
