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 ...
A Columbia University undergrad who was suspended for building an artificial intelligence tool to cheat on coding interviews at tech firms has raised $5.3 million to turn the idea into a company with ...
Roy Lee isn’t just another college dropout with a startup. The 21-year-old Korean American is flipping the script on how job interviews work, armed with a controversial AI tool that helps users cheat ...
A Columbia University student who used AI to pass a coding exam and received job offers from major companies like Amazon, Meta, and TikTok spread the word about it on social media and was expelled. He ...
AI service Cluely has raised $5.3 million in seed funding. The "cheating" site was founded by a Columbia student who was suspended from the school. The tool says it lets people cheat on "literally ...
A pair of Columbia University dropouts have secured $5.3 million in seed funding for Cluely, an AI startup that boldly promotes its technology as a way to “cheat on everything,” from coding tests to ...
Cluely's AI tool provides answers through a concealed in-browser window, invisible to others. Two Columbia University dropouts have secured $5.3 million in seed funding for their AI startup, Cluely.
Months after Cluely, the Columbia student start-up that enables AI to “cheat” in job interviews—and eventually “everything”—went viral, two other Columbia students have launched a tool that also ...
Cluely, an AI startup that uses a hidden in-browser window to analyze online conversations, has shot to fame with the controversial claim that its “undetectability” feature lets users “cheat on ...