logo
After Soham Parekh, YC rejects X user for an ‘extremely disappointing' reason: ‘This world is doomed'

After Soham Parekh, YC rejects X user for an ‘extremely disappointing' reason: ‘This world is doomed'

Indian Express10 hours ago
The Internet is still buzzing over Soham Parekh – the man who managed to work multiple startup jobs at once and allegedly duped several YC-backed founders. But just as that story continues to unravel, another viral post tied to Y Combinator has caught everyone's attention – and it's all because of… lowercase letters.
A user named Maze (@mazeincoding), who warns followers not to take '99% of what I say seriously,' recently shared a screenshot of a rejection email from Y Combinator. His caption read: 'Just got rejected from yc for using all lowercase in our application.'
The email he posted offers more detail. It reads: 'One recurring piece of internal feedback: the decision to format the entire application in lowercase made it difficult to evaluate. While unconventional formatting isn't disqualifying on its own, it signals a lack of attention to detail and clarity – both of which matter to us.'
It goes on to explain: 'We understand stylistic choices, but in a high-signal, high-noise environment, presentation is part of communication. Yours detracted from the content.'
Indianexpress.com couldn't independently verify the email.
just got rejected from yc for using all lowercase in our application pic.twitter.com/5jA7V1nDxD
— Maze (@mazeincoding) July 4, 2025
Unsurprisingly, the post blew up, racking up over a million views and sparking a wave of commentary. Maze later posted a screenshot showing that Y Combinator had liked the tweet, asking, 'uh should i be concerned?'
Reactions poured in. One user argued, 'Given the ubiquitous autocorrection features, it actually takes extra effort to write in all lowercase. So no, it doesn't signal a lack of attention to detail — on the contrary, it shows huge dedication to details and contrarian thinking.'
Another user said, 'God forbid you try not to look like ChatGPT wrote the whole thing.'
A third user wrote, 'yUo shOldVe MAde IT lOoK lIkE tHiS.'
While didn't work at Y Combinator, many of the companies he allegedly misled were part of its network. Founders, including Playground AI's Suhail Doshi, have accused Parekh of holding multiple jobs at once across YC-backed startups, without disclosing it to any of them.
Doshi and others claim Parekh took advantage of remote work setups to juggle roles, access sensitive information, and in some cases, allegedly funnel projects to his own ventures.
So while the lowercase controversy might be funny, the backdrop of YC's recent headlines is far from light – making Maze's viral post both oddly timed and perfectly in sync with what's buzzing on the Internet.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ensure transparent delivery of central scheme benefits: HDK
Ensure transparent delivery of central scheme benefits: HDK

Time of India

time4 hours ago

  • Time of India

Ensure transparent delivery of central scheme benefits: HDK

Mysuru: Union minister of heavy industries HD Kumaraswamy , on Saturday, emphasised the need for transparent delivery of benefits from centrally sponsored schemes to eligible beneficiaries. Chairing a meeting of the District Development Coordination and Monitoring Committee held at the zilla panchayat auditorium, the Union minister mentioned that due to higher-than-usual rainfall, there was crop damage. He asked officers to provide accurate reports and take measures for appropriate relief. Mysuru MP Yaduveer Wadiyar highlighted the need to identify and repair black spots on national highways in the district. He also called for detailed information on the Chamundi Hill Prasad scheme and stressed the importance of progress in the Swadesh Darshan scheme. Complaints about inadequate waste management in Siddalingapura gram panchayat were received, and officials were instructed to take action. Deputy commissioner G Lakshmikant Reddy told the meeting that 95% of the land for Mysuru-Kushalnagar NH 275 was acquired. For the expansion of Mysuru Airport's runway, about 240 acres are required, and most of the land has been acquired. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Is it legal? How to get Internet without paying a subscription? Techno Mag Learn More Undo The project is at the tender stage. The meeting was attended by Chamarajanagar MP Sunil Bose, Hunsur MLA GD Harish Gowda, DISHA Committee member Ashwin Kumar, district panchayat CEO S Ukesh Kumar, Mysuru City Corporation commissioner Shaikh Tanveer Asif, and superintendent of police, Mysuru, N Vishnuvardhana.

How Soham Parekh managed to juggle work between startups without getting caught?
How Soham Parekh managed to juggle work between startups without getting caught?

Hindustan Times

time5 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

How Soham Parekh managed to juggle work between startups without getting caught?

Soham Parekh, an India-based software engineer, has made headlines after admitting to secretly working across dozens of US startups at the same time. Soham Parekh was accused by Suhail Doshi, co‑founder of Mixpanel and Playground AI, of working for multiple startups at the same time.(X/@mhadifilms) The controversy surfaced after entrepreneur Suhail Doshi, in a series of posts on X, called Parekh a 'scammer' who had tricked several startups, including those backed by the Y Combinator accelerator. "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," San Francisco-based Suhail Doshi posted on X. He added that Parekh worked briefly at one of his companies and was fired within his first week. It was later revealed that Parekh juggled roles at around 34 different companies, including Alan AI, Synthesia, DynamoAI and often with overlapping job periods. Also Read: Soham Parekh breaks silence: Indian engineer admits to working at multiple startups, says it wasn't to scam anyone Ever since the post on X went viral, more companies shared their story showing how Parekh turned up for a job interview and how he managed to fool them. How Soham Parekh operated? Dhruv Amin, co-founder of AI startup Create, took to X to share the story of how his firm hired Soham Parekh as engineer number five and that he was recommended by a recruiter. Parekh called in sick on the very first day of the job and said he would onboard from home, and gave his address to ship his laptop. "Yes, we hired him. we're building an AI agent in SF. he was eng #5.- recommended by a recruiter, which lent legitimacy. He was eager and crushed our in person pair programming onsite. I believe he's actually a good engineer...I gave offer while waiting for responses for the first (and last) accepted same evening. said he had an nyc trip planned, then would first day at 9:30 am he calls in sick (strange). said he'd onboard from home. gave an address to ship laptop," Dhruv said in a post on X. The first red flag, Dhruv said, was the shipping address. Instead of home, Parekh asked for his laptop to be shipped to a San Francisco office building. Also Read: Why is Indian coder Soham Parekh being accused of 'scamming' US startups? Explained Dhruv, who happened to be on a visit to a doctor, checked the place, which housed industrial spaces and Sync Labs, a YC-backed startup. Meanwhile, Parekh called in sick in the first week, while his GitHub account showed late-night activity on private repositories. Over the days, things got even weirder with Parekh missing meetings, delayed deliverables and made excuses. "He then spent 2 days saying he was working on something from home we knew should have taken him 1/2 a day max. always almost ready, just testing something. Finally it started blocking the main thread. So my co-founder asked to take over his branch to get it done. Almost nothing had been done," Dhruv added. When the firm found out that Soham was working for Sync Labs, they confronted him, only to get a denial. Eventually, when the co-founder called Sync Labs and asked if Soham was working there, the response from the YC company was that he was working from home that day. Dhruv added that Parekh was a good engineer, but the "biggest mistake was lying repeatedly." Soham Parekh responds Soham Parekh, who is at the center of the online storm, has publicly admitted to working for multiple startups full-time. Parekh said that the allegations against him were true and he did it due to his financial circumstances. Also Read: Arrested terrorist, influenced by Zakir Naik, a 'big fish' in bomb-making: Andhra Police 'It is true. I'm not proud of what I've done. But, you know, financial circumstances, essentially. No one really likes to work 140 hours a week, right? But I had to do this out of necessity. I was in extremely dire financial circumstances," he said during an interview to tech show TBPN. The controversy has raised concerns on the growing trend of 'overemployment' where people take multiple remote jobs without disclosing them. It has also raised concerns over the hiring culture, especially among the tech startups, that hire people without adequate background checks.

The companies betting they can profit from Google search's demise
The companies betting they can profit from Google search's demise

Mint

time8 hours ago

  • Mint

The companies betting they can profit from Google search's demise

A new crop of startups are betting on the rapid demise of traditional Google search. At least a dozen new companies are pouring millions of dollars into software meant to help brands prepare for a world in which customers no longer browse the web and instead rely on ChatGPT, Perplexity and other artificial-intelligence chatbots to do it for them. The startups are developing tools to help businesses understand how AI chatbots gather information and learn how to steer them toward brands so that they appear in AI searches. Call it the search-engine optimization of the next chapter of the internet. 'Companies have been spending the last 10 or 20 years optimizing their website for the '10 blue links' version of Google," said Andrew Yan, co-founder of Athena, one of the startups. 'That version of Google is changing very fast, and it is changing forever." Companies large and small are scrambling to figure out how generative AI tools treat their online content—a boon to this new crop of startups, which say they are adding new customers at a clip. The customer interest is an early sign of how AI is transforming search, and how companies are trying to get ahead of the changes. Yan left Google's search team earlier this year when he decided traditional search wasn't the future. Athena launched last month with $2.2 million in funding from startup accelerator Y Combinator and other venture firms. Athena's software looks under the hood of different AI models to determine how each of them finds brand-related information. The software can track differences in the way the models talk about a given brand and recommend ways to optimize web content for AI. Yan said the company now has more than 100 customers around the world, including the online-invitation firm Paperless Post. Google executives and analysts don't expect traditional search to disappear. The company, which handles as much as 90% of the world's online searches, has been working to incorporate AI features into its flagship search engine and anticipates people will continue to use it alongside other tools such as Gemini, its AI model and chatbot. Yet the company, a unit of Alphabet, has been under pressure to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT and other AI upstarts that threaten its core business. It risks losing traffic and advertising revenue if users shift to AI-driven alternatives. Chief Executive Sundar Pichai has said that AI Overviews, a feature that summarizes search results at the top of the page, has grown significantly in usage since the company launched it in 2024. Google earlier this year began rolling out AI Mode, which responds to user queries in a chatbot-style conversation with far fewer links than a traditional search. Compared with traditional search, chatbot queries are often longer and more complicated, requiring chatbots to draw information from multiple sources at once and aggregate it for the user. AI models search in a number of ways: One platform might pull information from a company website, while another might rely more heavily on third-party content such as review sites. Of the startups helping companies navigate that complexity, Profound has raised more than $20 million from venture-capital firms including Kleiner Perkins and Khosla Ventures. The company is building its platform to monitor and analyze the many inputs that influence how AI chatbots relay brand-related information to users. Since launching last year, Profound has amassed dozens of large companies as customers, including fintech company Chime, the company said. 'We see a future of a zero-click internet where consumers only interact with interfaces like ChatGPT, and agents or bots will become the primary visitors to websites," said co-founder James Cadwallader. Venture-capital fund Saga Ventures was one of the first investors in Profound. Saga co-founder Max Altman, whose brother is OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, said interest in the startup's platform has exceeded his expectations. 'Just showing how brands are doing is extremely valuable for marketers, even more than we thought," he said. 'They're really flying completely blind." Saga estimates that Profound's competitors have together raised about $21 million, though some haven't disclosed funding. The value of such companies is still infinitesimal compared with that of the search-engine optimization industry, which helps brands appear in traditional searches and was estimated at roughly $90 billion last year. SEO consultant Cyrus Shepard said he did almost no work on AI visibility at the start of the year, but now it accounts for 10% to 15% of his time. By the end of the year, he expects it might account for as much as half. He has been experimenting with startup platforms promising AI search insights, but hasn't yet determined whether they will offer helpful advice on how to become more visible in AI searches, particularly as the models continue to change. 'I would classify them all as in beta," he said. Clerk, a company selling technology for software developers, has been working with startup Scrunch AI to analyze AI search traffic. Alex Rapp, Clerk's head of growth marketing, said that between January and June, the company saw a 9% increase in sign-ups for its platform coming from AI searches. Scrunch this year raised $4 million. It has more than 25 other customers and is working on a feature to help companies tailor the content, format and context of their websites for consumption by AI bots. 'Your website doesn't need to go away," co-founder Chris Andrew said. 'But 90% of its human traffic will." Write to Katherine Blunt at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store