Move Over Conscience, Cluely Just Made Cheating a Scalable Enterprise

Cluely’s annual recurring revenue has surged to $7 million just one week after launching its enterprise AI tool, thanks to massive uptake from both individual users and corporate clients.
The startup’s tool analyzes conversations in real time, silently feeds users context and suggested questions, and takes notes that appear only on their own screen.
Cluely’s controversial origin traces back to founder Roy Lee’s viral suspension from Columbia University for developing a tool that helped engineers cheat in job interviews.
Despite its scandalous debut and rage-bait marketing, the company is now VC-backed by Andreessen Horowitz, Abstract Ventures, and Susa Ventures.
Its rebranded enterprise version includes team management and security upgrades, targeting use cases like sales, support, and remote tutoring.
A mystery public company recently doubled its Cluely contract to $2.5 million, signaling that ethics aren’t a major obstacle to corporate adoption.
Lee claims real-time note-taking is the most popular feature, differentiating it from competitors that only offer post-meeting recaps.
But Cluely’s success may be short-lived, as rival Pickle released “Glass,” a free, open-source clone that’s rapidly gaining traction among developers.
With imitators multiplying and open-source challengers catching fire, Cluely’s high-flying growth may soon get a reality check.
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