Last week, Wired’s Miles Klee reported on Grammarly’s AI text editing feature, called “Expert Review” which uses the names of journalists and other literary figures in conjunction with revision advice ...
The feature, which Grammarly shut down Wednesday, presented editing suggestions as if they came from established authors and academics—without their consent.
Now it will ‘reimagine’ the Expert Review feature, and allow experts a choice about participating in future AI plans. is a ...
Grammarly said it will rethink the tool after criticism that it used real experts—including some who are deceased—without consent.
Shishir Mehrotra, CEO of Grammarly's owner Superhuman, has announced that the company is "disabling" a feature that impersonated journalists.
Angwin says she found out her identity was used by way of Casey Newton, who is also one of the experts that The Verge uncovered being used by Grammarly when we tested the feature this week. Several ...
Superhuman’s Ailian Gan, a director of product management for AI agents, told SFGATE that the “Expert Review” feature would come down this week, “as we reimagine the feature to make it more useful for ...
After enlisting countless authors, writers, and journalists for its much-needed “Expert Review” feature, the company has reversed course because it did so entirely without their consent, prompting a ...