AI NewsA writer is suing Grammarly for turning her and other authors into ‘AI editors’ without consent

A writer is suing Grammarly for turning her and other authors into ‘AI editors’ without consent

1:02 AM IST · March 13, 2026

A writer is suing Grammarly for turning her and other authors into ‘AI editors’ without consent

Grammarly released acontroversial featurelast week that uses AI to simulate editorial feedback, making it seem like you’re getting a critique from novelist Stephen King, the late scientist Carl Sagan, or tech journalist Kara Swisher. But Grammarly did not get permission from the hundreds of experts it included in this feature, called “Expert Review,” to use their names. One of the affected writers, journalist Julia Angwin, has filed aclass action lawsuitagainst Superhuman, the parent company that owns Grammarly, arguing that the company violated the privacy and publicity rights of her and the other writers it impersonated. A class action lawsuit allows writers to join Angwin in her case. “I have worked for decades honing my skills as a writer and editor, and I am distressed to discover that a tech company is selling an imposter version of my hard-earned expertise,” Angwin said in astatement. The situation is more than a little ironic — Angwin has spent her career leading investigations into tech companies’ impacts on privacy. Other critics of this kind of technology, like renowned AI ethicistTimnit Gebru, were also included in Grammarly’s “Expert Review.” The “Expert Review” feature, available only to subscribers paying $144 a year, predictably fails to deliver on the promise of thoughtful feedback. Casey Newton, the founder and editor of the tech newsletter Platformer and another person impersonated by Grammarly,fed one of his articlesinto the tool and got feedback from Grammarly’s approximation of tech journalist Kara Swisher. Grammarly’s imitation of Swisher produced “feedback” so generic that it raises the question of why the company would go through the rigmarole of using these writers’ likenesses in the first place. Here is what Grammarly’s approximation of Kara Swisher told him: “Could you briefly compare how daily AI users versus AI skeptics articulate risk, creating a through-line readers can follow?” Newton relayed the message from the AI approximation of Kara Swisher to the actual, real human being, Kara Swisher. “You rapacious information and identity thieves better get ready for me to go full McConaughey on you,” Swisher texted Newton (referring to Grammarly). “Also, you suck.” Grammarly has since disabled the “Expert Review” feature, according to aLinkedIn postby Superhuman CEO Shishir Mehrotra. While Mehrotra offered an apology, he continued to defend the idea of the feature. “Imagine your professor sharpening your essay, your sales leader reshaping a customer pitch, a thoughtful critic challenging your arguments, or a leading expert elevating your proposal,” he wrote. “For experts, this is a chance to build that same ubiquitous bond with users, much like Grammarly has.”

read more

Latest AI News

View All News →
OpenAI Deployment Company Business Unit Launched to Build, Deploy AI Systems for Enterprises

OpenAI Deployment Company Business Unit Launched to Build, Deploy AI Systems for Enterprises

OpenAI, on Monday, announced the creation of the OpenAI Deployment Company, a new business unit dedicated to building and deploying artificial intelligence (AI) systems for enterprises. The announcement comes just a week after Anthropic launched a new enterprise AI service company, highlighting the continuing rivalry between the two. OpenAI's project is wider in scope and aims to bridge the gap between "having access to AI" and "actually using AI" to drive measurable business results. The AI giant has partnered with 19 global investment firms, consultancies, and system integrators.

32 minutes ago

View

Google I/O 2026: Gemini Omni Video Model Reportedly in Testing Ahead of Annual Developer Conference

Google I/O 2026: Gemini Omni Video Model Reportedly in Testing Ahead of Annual Developer Conference

Google may be preparing to expand Gemini's video generation capabilities with a new model called Gemini Omni. A fresh leak suggests the tool will let users create and edit AI-generated videos directly within Gemini. Early demos show the model producing more realistic motion, cleaner text rendering, and improved scene composition. The feature has not been announced officially, but its appearance ahead of Google I/O 2026 suggests Google could soon reveal new plans for AI-powered video creation.

32 minutes ago

View

Indian Armed Forces Bet on Sarvam, CoRover.ai to Prepare for AI Warfare

Indian Armed Forces Bet on Sarvam, CoRover.ai to Prepare for AI Warfare

As militaries worldwide race to integrate AI into warfare, India appears to be moving from experimentation toward building its own sovereign military AI ecosystem.

32 minutes ago

View

Applied Materials, TSMC Deepen Chip Partnership for New Centre in Silicon Valley

Applied Materials, TSMC Deepen Chip Partnership for New Centre in Silicon Valley

The companies will jointly develop semiconductor technologies for AI scaling at Applied Materials’ EPIC research facility, which is scheduled to be operational this year.

32 minutes ago

View