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Grammarly has disabled an artificial intelligence (AI) feature which mimicked personas of prominent writers, including Stephen King and scientist Carl Sagan. The writing tool took down the function following a backlash from individuals whose identities were impersonated.


A white notebook with "Grammarly" and its logo lies on a textured surface. A matching pen rests on top. Shadows create a contrast.
Credit: UNSPLASH

The "Expert Review" feature offered writing feedback "inspired by" the styles of famous authors and academics. Superhuman, the tech firm which runs Grammarly, removed the feature this week.


Writers met the feature with resistance, including a multi-million dollar lawsuit, after finding their names and reputations used as "AI personas" without their consent. Chief Executive Shishir Mehrotra apologised on LinkedIn, acknowledging the tool had "misrepresented" the voices of experts.


Investigative journalist Julia Angwin, a New York Times contributing opinion writer, is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit filed against Superhuman and Grammarly in the Southern District of New York. The suit was lodged in the Southern District of New York.


Angwin told the BBC she was 'stunned' to find her professional identity being marketed as a commercial product. She said she had considered deepfakes as something that primarily happened to celebrities around images.


Editing is her livelihood, Angwin noted, but she had never thought of anyone trying to steal it. The legal filing alleges the tech firm misappropriated the identities of "hundreds" of writers to drive profits for its paid subscription service.


According to Angwin’s lawyer, Peter Romer-Friedman, the case has already seen significant momentum. He said over 40 people had contacted them within 24 hours of the suit’s filing.


Romer-Friedman described the company's actions as a "brazen violation of the law." The lawsuit argues it is unlawful to use names for commercial purposes without consent.


It also seeks to stop the platform from attributing advice to experts that they "never gave." The filing states that damages exceed USD 5 million (£3.7 million).


Romer-Friedman noted this is a minimum jurisdictional requirement, with the true figure to be calculated based on the firm's earnings from the tool. Angwin described the quality of the AI's output as a "slopperganger," referencing content described on social media as "AI slop."


The edits attributed to her were making sentences worse and more complex, she said. Angwin found the idea of her name giving terrible advice "really appalling."


Grammarly was founded in 2009 as a writing-review tool and began integrating a suite of generative-AI tools in Aug. 2025. The Expert Review function appears to have launched without the named famous personas, which were introduced later.


Although the company began rebranding to Superhuman in Oct., Grammarly was kept as the name of its main service. Superhuman initially stated it would maintain the feature but allow those named to "opt-out" as criticism mounted in recent days, according to The Verge.


Gaming journalist Wes Fenlon, whose persona was used in the tool, wrote on BlueSky that 'Opt-out via email' was a 'laughably inadequate recourse for selling a product that verges on impersonation and profits on unearned credibility.' Romer-Friedman argued the burden of consent should never have been on the writers.


Mehrotra said the company received "valid critical feedback" from experts concerned about misrepresentation. This kind of scrutiny improves products, and the company takes it seriously, he stated.


The chief executive said the AI agent had drawn on 'publicly available information from third-party LLMs' to surface writing suggestions inspired by the published work of influential voices. Mehrotra apologised, adding, "We hear the feedback and recognise we fell short on this."


Responding to the lawsuit, Mehrotra told the BBC that Expert Review was being taken down for a redesign before the claim was filed. He stated that in its short lifespan, it had "very little usage."


"We are sorry, and we will rethink our approach going forward," Mehrotra said. However, he added that the legal claims within the lawsuit are "without merit" and the company will "strongly defend against them."


The firm is working on a "better approach to bringing experts onto our platform" in a way that will benefit both users and experts, he explained.

  • Grammarly disabled its "Expert Review" AI feature after a backlash and a multi-million dollar lawsuit.

  • The tool mimicked the writing styles of prominent figures, including Stephen King and Carl Sagan, without consent.

  • Investigative journalist Julia Angwin is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against Superhuman and Grammarly.


Source: BBC

Chinese engineers are integrating OpenClaw, an open-source artificial intelligence agent, into robots capable of executing real-world tasks. This integration spans from household chores to enterprise services.


Red, round creature with teal eyes on a dark starry background. Text reads "OpenClaw: The AI That Actually Does Things."
Credit: OpenClaw

Domestic robotics giant Ecovacs unveiled Bajie, a robot integrated with OpenClaw, at the Appliance and Electronics World Expo in Shanghai. The robot, equipped with a robotic arm and gripper mounted on a round, vacuum-shaped wheeled base, demonstrated its ability to pick up and organise clutter at the conference, according to a report by the Chinese news outlet ifeng.


Ecovacs founder Qian Dongqi said in a recent interview with ifeng that the goal for robots like Bajie is to eventually take over all household chores. Unlike traditional robots that rely on preprogrammed rules, Bajie functions as a custom “butler” trained on the specific habits of each family member, according to Ecovacs.


OpenClaw’s robotics integration also extends beyond household settings. Last month, Guangzhou-based AgileX Robotics released a guide for integrating OpenClaw with its Nero 7-axis robotic arm.


Once configured, users can describe desired actions in natural language to control the device. This eliminates the need to manually write kinematics code.


The artificial intelligence agent framework is also finding its way into the enterprise services sector. Last week, Fu Sheng, the chairman and CEO of Cheetah Mobile, offered a glimpse into automated customer services.


Mr. Fu demonstrated on social media how the GreetingBot Mini robot has been integrated with the OpenClaw-based AI assistant, EasyClaw. Manufactured by Cheetah Mobile-backed OrionStar, the robot generated a variety of greetings after just a few iterations of simple natural language instruction.


This rapid advancement in artificial intelligence integration is echoing across the wider robotics industry. Earlier this month, OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger reposted an announcement on X saying that the system could now be integrated into Chinese robot-maker Unitree’s G1 humanoid robot.


The integration allows OpenClaw to “understand physical space and temporality”, according to the post. Dimensional, a US-based development team, open-sourced the project on GitHub, noting the system could also integrate with most drones and quadrupeds.

  • OpenClaw AI is being integrated into Chinese robots for diverse real-world applications.

  • Ecovacs’ Bajie robot aims to automate household chores by acting as a custom butler.

  • AgileX Robotics and Cheetah Mobile are applying OpenClaw to industrial robot control and automated customer services.


Source: SCMP

Nvidia is preparing a version of its Groq artificial-intelligence chips for sale to the Chinese market, according to two sources familiar with the matter.


Modern building with a geometric glass roof and greenery. A black sign with a green logo and the word "NVIDIA" is in the foreground.
Credit: NVIDIA

The organisation licensed technology from Groq, an AI chip startup, late last year in a USD 17 billion deal, and Nvidia showed a new lineup of products based around its chips at its annual developer conference in San Jose, California, this week.


This development follows comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who said the company restarted production of its H200 chips. These chips are a predecessor to its current flagship.


Huang stated production resumed after obtaining export licenses from the U.S. administration and receiving purchase orders from Chinese customers. This indicates a targeted effort to serve the region.


Nvidia plans to tap Groq's chips for what is known as inference, where AI systems answer questions, write code or carry out tasks for users.


In the products Nvidia showed this week, the company plans to use its forthcoming Vera Rubin chips, which cannot be sold in China, in combination with the Groq chips.


While Nvidia holds a dominant position in the market for training AI systems, it encounters more significant competition in the inference market. Several major Chinese firms, including AI heavyweights such as Baidu, already produce their own inference chips.


Huang underscored the change in his speech at the developer conference on Monday. "The inference inflection has arrived," he said. "And demand just keeps on going up," he added...


He estimated the revenue opportunity for Nvidia AI chips may reach at least USD 1 trillion through 2027.


The chips being readied for China are not downgraded versions or made specifically for the Chinese market, one of the sources told Reuters. But the new variant can be adapted to work with other systems, the source said, adding that the Groq chip is expected to be available in May.

  • Nvidia is developing a Groq artificial-intelligence chip variant for the Chinese market.

  • The company previously licensed Groq technology late last year in a USD 17 billion agreement.

  • Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated H200 chip production restarted following export licenses from U.S. President Donald Trump's administration and Chinese orders.


Source: REUTERS

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