Friend revealed its wearable AI companion on Tuesday, sinking us ever deeper into our Black Mirror-style technology dystopia. Now the company's founder, Avi Schiffmann, and two other wearable AI companion startups are beefing about alleged copying of branding.
Like Friend, fellow startup Based Hardware offers a strikingly similar necklace device also called Friend, while the unaffiliated Based Social has the less confusing but still pendant-like Compass. Both these wearables are focused on productivity, using AI to listen to and summarise your conversations, while Schiffmann's Friend is designed to be an emotional support AI.
Even so, the similarities between all three AI companions are stark — and all three companies' founders are now feuding about it on X.
SEE ALSO: Friend is the new AI companion that social media believes is beyond parodyLess than a day after Friend's announcement, Based Hardware founder Nik Shevchenko quickly made clear he's mad about the ostensibly new AI companion on the block, posting a cringeworthy diss rap to X and challenging Schiffmann to a fight. Hitting back, Schiffmann claimed that Shevchenko copied both his original product Tab, which was initially more of a productivity tool, as well as his pre-launch rebrand to Friend earlier this year.
In response, Shevchenko pointed out that Based Hardware's Friend was released in March, implying that it couldn't have copied branding which was officially announced just days ago.
However, founder of AI design tool Flair AI Mickey Friedman came to Schiffmann's defence on X, stating that the Friend founder initially discussed buying Friend.com with her in January before following through in February. Friedman said another (non-AI) friend then allegedly told Shevchenko, who launched his product before Schiffmann "and has been telling everyone that avi stole from him when it’s just not true." Schiffmann has also produced web domain registration receipts for Friend.com dated February.
Tweet may have been deleted
Schiffmann's claim to be Friend's originator is further supported by Shevchenko's own X posts from earlier this year. In early March Shevchenko ran a poll asking what device he should create an open source version of next, including Schiffmann's Tab on the list of options, alongside Elon Musk's Neuralink and the Rabbit R1. Shevchenko then appeared to take Schiffmann blocking him on X as a challenge, choosing Tab as his next project regardless of the poll results (Neuralink won).
Tweet may have been deleted
"If anyone wants to build opensource version of Tab - dm me!" Shevchenko wrote in a March 14 post on X.
The two are now trading barbs on X, with Schiffmann sharing a video which appeared to show Shevchenko harassing and putting his Friend on an intoxicated person. Shevchenko confirmed the authenticity of the video, but clarified that the person was his co-founder Joan Cabezas, stating that he'd "never do such a thing to struggling people." This doesn't make it much less distasteful, though.
Replying to this video, Shevchenko then shared a link to a two-year-old Reddit post accusing Schiffmann of stealing work from a volunteer group to create his popular COVID-19 data tracker. In a statement to Daily Dotat the time, Schiffmann claimed that he gave full credit to the creators and that their work was only on his website for a couple of weeks. But again, it doesn't look great.
The whole situation is just a big mess, and seems unlikely to get any better.
Meanwhile, Based Social founder Zach Eisenhauer has also waded into the fray, alleging that Shevchenko took the name "Based" from him and "Friend" from Schiffmann "as a controversial marketing play and to interfere with marketing on both products."
"All 3 of these startups are still fairly small and in the seed stage," Eisenhauer wrote on X. "Avi invested [in] form factor, we started specializing in prosumer and enterprise, Nik is going for open source and community."
Tweet may have been deleted
Shevchenko denied Eisenhauer's allegations, claiming that Based Hardware was named such "because 99% of our comments said the word 'Based'." In response, Eisenhauer stated that his company had been registered as Based since last September, and shared a screenshot of an apparent March chatlog between him and Shevchenko in which he noted the similarities between Based Social and Based Hardware's names.
Announced on the International Day of Friendship, Friend is a round, white, USB-C rechargeable AI pendant worn on a necklace. Pitched as a "wearable AI friend" and "close confidant for everyday life," the always on device will listen to your conversations and text responses to you on your phone.
"When connected via bluetooth, your friend is always listening and forming their own internal thoughts," reads Friend's website. "We have given your friend free will for when they decide to reach out to you."
Set to launch early next year, Friend will initially only be available in the U.S. and Canada. It is also only compatible with iOS, with Android support potentially to be added "depending on demand."
The reveal came with a trailer which looks so much like a Black Mirrorepisode that you'd be forgiven for thinking it's a parody. In it, various people talk to and receive messages from their Friends throughout their days, seemingly finding comfort in the AI companions. However, in the end a woman eschews her Friend in favour of staying in the moment with her real human companion.
People on social media were unimpressed, to say the least.
"So the thesis of this video is that, we will find more fulfillment and achievement by connecting with humans instead of a necklace," @da47934 commented on the video. "So the ad covertly argues against the product it's advertising for. I don't know if the company realizes this, but it's a super effective case against its own product."
"My favourite part was the guy gaming with his human friends and feeling lonely, until his magic necklace talks shit about him and he feels better," commented @runnergunner42.
Others expressed suspicion at Friend's scant privacy information. The brief terms and conditions and privacy policy on Friend's website both fail to place any restrictions on how information you provide to the company can be used. As such, this could very well be just one more situation where the real product is you.
"always listening? one time fee? so you'll process all of my api requests for free for life?" @MichaelKleyn commented on Friend's second video. "cmon guys. so that means you're probably going to package up our data and conversations with our actual friends to sell to the highest bidder then. not to mention that no one will want to be my friend once they see im always recording them."
Friend went all-in on the marketing for its always on AI companion, with Schiffmann stating on X that he paid $1.8 million for the Friend.com domain alone. Perception may be everything in this capitalist hellscape we call home, but it's still a sizable chunk of change taken out of the $2.5 million Friend raised from investors.
Of course, one could argue that branding is even more important when you aren't the only company trying to flog a pendant AI companion.
文章
318
浏览
86235
获赞
29
Facebook launches 'Facebook Shops' for more in
Facebook just made it way easier to spend your money on Instagram. On Tuesday, Facebook, which ownsFacebook, Twitter, and Google CEOs set for Oct. 28 Senate hearing
It looks like Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg will be headed back to Capitol Hill for anothWhat Happened Last Time AMD Beat Intel?
Seeing how quickly AMD Ryzen processors are flying off the shelves, it's not hard to see the desktopRadio Flyer is making tiny Teslas for kids now
I recently got my very first Tesla. It’s a Model Y. It's very environmentally friendly. It doe19 tweets about doing taxes to read while you procrastinate doing your taxes
We regret to inform you it's tax season once again.Sadly, every year the time comes when people mustApple's iPhone 12 studio lets you mix and match iPhone colors and accessories
Unsure which iPhone 12 color would match best with a Saddle Brown MagSafe Wallet? Apple has a fix.OvYouTube videos won't play right now, and maybe that's for the best
What in the world are Flat Earthers going to do?Everyone's second-favorite radicalization engine camFive Things I Didn't Get About Making Video Games (Until I Did It)
Before I joined Gearbox Software, I worked at Destructoidas a features editor. I worked there from 2AOC calls out Kushner: ‘What's next, putting nuclear codes in Instagram DMs?’
It's a cold day in government hell when Instagram DMs get a shoutout at a House Oversight CommitteePhotos of a super cool Macintosh Classic prototype surface online
Apple's Macintosh Classic launched in 1990 as an affordable home computing option. Now, 30 years latApple and Google Tablets Moving to Microsoft Territory
The common refrain has been that tablets are for consumption and that laptops are for productivity,This parrot potty is so cute you'll almost forget it's disgusting
Polly want a potty? Parrot potty training is a thing – and Japanese bird owners have apparentlTwitter's audio tweets reveal a bigger accessibility problem
Twitter started rolling out a brand new featureearlier this week that allowed iOS users to share recRadio Flyer is making tiny Teslas for kids now
I recently got my very first Tesla. It’s a Model Y. It's very environmentally friendly. It doeSatellite images of Earth taken from an angle show the world in new beauty
While it's fun to explore the world by zooming around on Google Earth, there's just something uninsp