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Today, I’m talking with Shishir Mehrotra, the CEO of Superhuman, the company formerly known as Grammarly, which is still its flagship product. Back in August, Grammarly shipped a feature called Expert Review, which allowed you to get writing suggestions from AI-cloned “experts,” and recently, reporters at The Verge and other outlets discovered that those experts included me, among many others.
No one ever asked permission to use our names this way, and a lot of reporters were outraged by this. To Shishir’s credit, he did not cancel our interview and he came on and stuck it out. This conversation got tense at times, and it’s clear we disagree about how extractive AI feels for people. There’s a lot in this one, and I’m excited to hear what you think.
Read the full interview transcript on The Verge.
Links:
Why I’m suing Grammarly | New York Times
Grammarly will stop using identities without permission | The Verge
Grammarly to keep using writer identities unless they opt out | The Verge
Grammarly turned me into an AI editor and I hate it | Platformer
Grammarly is using our identities without permission | The Verge
Grammarly is changing its name to Superhuman | The Verge
Grammarly wants to become an ‘AI productivity platform’ | The Verge
Viacom v. YouTube, 2007 | Electronic Frontier Foundation
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Credits:
Decoder is a production of The Verge and part of the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Decoder is produced by Kate Cox and Nick Statt. This episode was edited by Xander Adams. Our editorial director is Kevin McShane.
The Decoder music is by Breakmaster Cylinder.
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