A Princeton grad’s $30M AI detector is selling to Superhuman
Superhuman, the company that used to be Grammarly, just bought GPTZero, the startup that catches AI writing. The contradiction is the point. As the internet fills with machine-made text, proving something is human is becoming a product.
There is a neat irony at the centre of this deal. Superhuman’s biggest product helps people write with AI. It has just bought the startup best known for catching AI writing.
On Tuesday, Superhuman, the productivity firm formerly called Grammarly, agreed to acquire GPTZero. The companies did not disclose terms. PitchBook puts GPTZero’s value above $88m, Business Insider reported.
Founder Edward Tian says the company passed 19 million registered users and $30m in annual recurring revenue. It got there on total funding of just $13.5m, from a short backer list that includes Uncork Capital, Footwork, Jack Altman’s Alt Capital and Neo. The two cofounders and GPTZero’s 30 staff now join Superhuman...
Copyright of this story solely belongs to thenextweb.com. To see the full text click HERE