Technology
TC Sessions: AI Trivia Countdown — Your next shot at winning big

TechCrunch Sessions: AI hits UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall on June 5, and we’re kicking Day 3 of AI trivia into high gear. This is your chance to prove you know your stuff — and score a major ticket deal while you’re at it.
Answer a few AI-focused trivia questions, and you could win two tickets for just $200 total. That’s one flat rate and one freebie.
The last day of trivia is June 4 — don’t miss this chance to win big and join the AI epicenter.
Think fast — it’s Day 3 AI trivia time
Whether you know which company built the first transformer model or how many startups globally integrate generative AI, this is your moment to shine.
Quick AI quiz. Big savings.
How it works
Step 1: Fill out the trivia form
Step 2: Watch your inbox for the code if you win
Step 3: Use the code to claim your 2-for-1 ticket deal
The questions are fast. The reward? Even faster. Test your AI IQ and win big before June 4.

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Technology
Who is Soham Parekh, the serial moonlighter Silicon Valley startups can’t stop hiring?

In the last week, social media users have shared dozens of stories about encounters with Soham Parekh, a software engineer who seems to have been simultaneously working at multiple Silicon Valley startups — unbeknownst to the companies — for the last several years.
But who is Parekh, how did he pull off his career as a serial moonlighter, and why can’t Silicon Valley get enough of him?
Origins of virality
The saga all started when Suhail Doshi — CEO of image generation startup Playground AI — shared a post Tuesday on X that began: “PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) who works at 3-4 startups at the same time. He’s been preying on YC companies and more. Beware.”
Doshi claims that, roughly a year ago, he fired Parekh from Playground AI after he found out he was working at other companies. “[I] told him to stop lying/scamming people. He hasn’t stopped a year later,” Doshi wrote.
That post from Doshi received roughly 20 million views and prompted several other founders to share their run-ins with Parekh as well.
Flo Crivello, the CEO of Lindy, a startup that helps people automate their workflows with AI, said he hired Parekh in recent weeks, but fired him in light of Doshi’s tweet.
Matt Parkhurst, the CEO of Antimetal, a startup that does automated cloud management, confirmed that Parekh was the company’s first engineering hire in 2022. Parkhurst tells TechCrunch that Antimetal let Parekh go in early 2023 after they realized he was moonlighting at other companies.
Parekh also seems to have worked at Sync Labs, a startup that makes an AI lip-synching tool, where he even starred in a promotional video. He was ultimately let go.
At some point, Parekh applied to several Y Combinator-backed startups. Haz Hubble, the co-founder of Pally AI, a Y Combinator-backed startup building an “AI relationship management platform,” says he offered Parekh a founding engineer role. Adish Jain, the co-founder of YC-backed Mosaic — an AI video editing startup — said he interviewed Parekh for a role, too.
TechCrunch has reached out to these companies for comment, but they did not immediately respond.
It turns out that Parekh did quite well in many of these interviews and received offers, largely because he’s a gifted software engineer.
For instance, Rohan Pandey, a founding research engineer of the YC-backed startup Reworkd, told TechCrunch that he interviewed Parekh for a role and he was a strong candidate. Pandey, who is no longer with the startup, says Parekh was one of the top three performers on an algorithms-focused interview they gave candidates.
Pandey said the Reworkd team suspected something was off with Parekh. At the time, Parekh told Reworkd he was in the U.S. — a requirement for the job — but the company didn’t believe him. They ran an IP logger on a Zoom link from Parekh and located him in India.
Pandey recalled other things Parekh said often didn’t add up, and some of his GitHub contributions and previous roles didn’t quite make sense either. That seems to be a common experience when dealing with Parekh.
Adam Silverman, co-founder of the AI agent observability startup, Agency, told TechCrunch his company also interviewed Parekh. Silverman said Parekh sent him a cold DM about a job opening at Agency, and they set up a meeting. Parekh had to reschedule that meeting five times, according to Silverman and emails from Parekh viewed by TechCrunch.
Silverman says he was also impressed by Parekh’s technical ability, but in the interview, he insisted on working remotely. Much like with Reworkd, that was a red flag for Agency.
Roy Lee, the CEO of the “cheat on everything” AI startup, Cluely, tells TechCrunch he interviewed Parekh twice for a role. Lee said Parekh interviews quite well and “seemed to have strong react knowledge,” referencing a popular JavaScript library for building user interfaces.
Lee says Cluely did not end up hiring Parekh. However, several other companies clearly did.
Parekh’s perspective
Parekh made an appearance on the Technology Business Programming Network (TBPN) on Thursday to tell co-hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays his side of the story and explain why he’s worked at so many companies.
He admitted that he’s been working at multiple jobs simultaneously since 2022. Parekh claims he was not using AI tools or hiring junior software engineers to assist him with his workload.
All that work has made Parekh a much better programmer, he believes, but notes that it’s taken a toll.
Parekh said he’s notorious among his friends for not sleeping. He repeated several times throughout the interview that he works 140 hours a week, which comes out to 20 hours a day, seven days a week. That seems to be borderline impossible — or at the very least, extremely unhealthy and unsustainable.
Parekh also said he took multiple jobs because he was in “financial jeopardy,” implying he needed all the income he could get from his various employers. He claims he deferred going to a graduate school program he had been accepted to, and instead decided to work at several startups simultaneously.
Notably, Doshi shared a copy of Parekh’s resumé that claims he received a masters degree from Georgia Institute of Technology.
When TBPN’s co-hosts asked why Parekh didn’t just ask one company to raise his salary and help with his financial struggles, Parekh said he liked to keep a boundary between his professional and private life. (But he had also opted for low salaries and high equity at all his jobs, which doesn’t quite add up with his financial crisis story. However, Parekh declined to share more about it.)
Parekh told the hosts he genuinely loved his work, and it was not solely about the money. He says he was very invested in the missions of all the companies where he worked.
He also admitted that he’s not proud of what he’s done, and he doesn’t endorse it.
What now?
Some are calling Parekh a scam artist and a liar, but in classic Silicon Valley fashion, Parekh appears to be trying to turn his viral moment into a business.
Parekh announced his newest employer, which he claims to be exclusively working at: Darwin Studios, a startup working on AI video remixing.
However, Parekh quickly deleted the post after announcing it, as did the founder and CEO of the startup, Sanjit Juneja.
TechCrunch has reached out to Parekh requesting an interview regarding this article, however, he has not yet accepted. Instead, a spokesperson representing him sent TechCrunch a statement from Darwin’s CEO.
“Soham is an incredibly talented engineer and we believe in his abilities to help bring our products to market,” said Juneja.
We’ve seen countless startups turn their viral, often controversial, moments into businesses in the last year. One of the most famous is Cluely, which is known for creating provocative marketing campaigns. It’s rage bait, but it’s attention-grabbing, and it was enough to land Cluely a $15 million seed round from Andreessen Horowitz.
Perhaps Parekh will land a similar fortune in the future.
Update: This story has been updated to reflect TBPN’s current name and include additional comments from Antimetal.

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Technology
Ready-made stem cell therapies for pets could be coming

Earlier this week, San Diego startup Gallant announced $18 million in funding to bring the first FDA-approved ready-to-use stem cell therapy to veterinary medicine. If it passes regulatory muster, it could create a whole new way to treat our fur babies.
It’s still an experimental field, even though people have been researching stem cells for humans for decades. Seven-year-old Gallant’s first target is a painful mouth condition in cats called Feline Chronic Gingivostomatitis (FCGS), which Gallant says could receive FDA approval by early 2026.
The field has shown some encouraging early results. Studies on dogs with arthritis showed improvements in pain and mobility, with some benefits lasting up to two years. But when researchers tried similar treatments for kidney disease in cats — that’s another condition Gallant wants to tackle — the results were more mixed.
What makes Gallant’s approach different is convenience. Most stem cell treatments today require harvesting cells from the patient or donors with matching tissue, whereas Gallant’s therapy uses ready-to-use cells from donor animals, even if they are a different species.
Investors clearly see potential here. The funding round was led by existing backer Digitalis Ventures, with participation from NovaQuest Capital Management, which previously invested in the first FDA-approved human stem cell therapy.
The company has an interesting backstory. Gallant’s founder, Aaron Hirschhorn, previously sold DogVacay to its biggest rival in the dog-sitting marketplace, Rover. Hirschhorn passed away in 2021; Gallant is now led by Linda Black, who joined as its president and chief scientific officer from nearly the beginning. Gallant has now raised at least $44 million altogether from investors.

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Technology
Cluely’s ARR doubled in a week to $7M, founder Roy Lee says. But rivals are coming.

Cluely’s revenue has skyrocketed to about $7 million in ARR since it launched its new enterprise product a week ago, founder Roy Lee told TechCrunch. “Every single person who has a meeting or an interview is testing this out.”
Cluely, one of Silicon Valley’s most-talked-about startups, offers products that use AI to analyze online conversations, deliver real-time notes, provide context, and suggest questions to ask. This information appeared discreetly on the user’s screen, invisible to others.
For weeks leading up to the product reveal, Lee boasted that the company’s annual recurring revenue (ARR) exceeded $3 million and that the startup was profitable.
The increase in interest is coming from consumers and businesses alike, he said.
Cluely is a startup born of controversy after Lee posted in a viral X thread saying he was suspended by Columbia University because he and a co-founder developed a tool to cheat on job interviews for software engineers.
He turned around and created a product and startup out of the tech, originally using the marketing tagline that it helps you “cheat on everything.” Now that it is backed by big-league VCs like Andreessen Horowitz, Abstract Ventures, and Susa Ventures, it has toned down its marketing to “Everything You Need. Before You Ask. … This feels like cheating.”
It has turned into a Silicon Valley sensation from its rage-bait marketing.
But the startup’s controversial history hasn’t stopped businesses from showing interest in Cluely’s product, Lee insists, telling us that it has signed a public company that just this week doubled its annual contract with Cluely to $2.5 million. Lee declined to name the company.
The enterprise version of the product is similar to the consumer offering, but it comes with some extra features such as team management and additional security settings, Lee said. Business use cases include sales calls, customer support, and remote tutoring.
Which Cluely features are the most interesting to customers? According to Lee, it’s Cluely’s ability to take real-time notes.
“Meeting notes have been a proven very sticky, very interesting AI use case. The only problem with them is they’re all post-call,” Lee said of competitors’ products. “You want to look back at them in the middle of a meeting, and that is what we offer.”
However, Cluely’s real-time notetaker may be easy to replicate. On Thursday, Pickle, a company that describes itself as a digital clone factory, claimed on X that it built Glass, an open source, free product with very similar functionality to Cluely. By mid-day it had already garnered over 850 stars and been forked nearly 150 times — indicating that the open source developer community is giving this free version a try.
Time will tell if Cluely’s meteoric rise can withstand competition from free copycat products like Glass.

A blog which focuses on business, Networth, Technology, Entrepreneurship, Self Improvement, Celebrities, Top Lists, Travelling, Health, and lifestyle. A source that provides you with each and every top piece of information about the world. We cover various different topics.
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