Once a shining star in the AI startup world, Builder.ai promised to revolutionize software development with its AI assistant, "Natasha," claiming to build apps effortlessly for anyone. Valued at $1.5 billion with over $450 million in funding from giants like Microsoft, the company seemed unstoppable. But in May 2025, it all came crashing down, revealing a story of deception, financial misconduct, and a stark warning for the AI industry.
The "Legit AI: Actual Indians" Scandal
Builder.ai sold itself as an AI that could create apps all on its own, with as much ease as "ordering a pizza." The reality? Natasha was a shell, driven not by state-of-the-art artificial intelligence, but more than 700 humans in India managing databases, routing customer requests and transcribing every chat. This “AI washing,” when self-serving or sensationalist claims obscure the true capabilities of the technology, was no small oversight. For eight years, Builder.ai deceived clients and investors and overlooked early signals, including a 2019 expose in The Wall Street Journal and a lawsuit from a former executive claiming deceitful business practices. Inside the company, employees jokingly referred to Natasha as “A Guy Instead,” a clear reference to the company’s misrepresentation of themselves.
Financial Fraud Fuels the Fall
The technological deception was just one piece of the story. Builder.ai’s demise was sped up by egregious financial misconduct. The business inflated its 2024 revenue estimates by 300 percent, with forecasts by $220 million, as against audited figures of $50–55 million. The charges of “round-tripping that inflated sales by reciprocally billing VerSe Innovation only made the company lose trust further. Mismanagement, which includes going without a CFO for 10 months and suspect auditing practices, created an environment in which these problems could grow. That was before creditors, with Viola Credit leading the way, seized $37 million of its cash in May 2025 following a loan default, and Builder.ai’s activities ground to a halt, resulting in the filing of bankruptcy in the UK, US, India, UAE, and Singapore.
The Human and Industry Toll
The fallout was devastating. Approximately 1,000 employees lost their jobs, and countless client projects were left incomplete. Major creditors, including Amazon ($85 million) and Microsoft ($30 million), were left with unpaid debts. A US federal probe is now investigating, and the involvement of private intelligence firms and defamation lawyers underscores the scandal’s complexity. Beyond Builder.ai, the collapse has broader implications. It’s a wake-up call for the AI industry, exposing the dangers of prioritizing hype over substance. Investors are growing wary, demanding proven fundamentals over flashy pitches, and regulators are cracking down on AI washing with increased scrutiny.
Lessons for the Future
Builder.ai’s downfall highlights the need for transparency and accountability in AI. Ethical AI development requires clear communication about human involvement — human-in-the-loop systems are valid, but hiding them as full AI autonomy is not. The scandal also underscores the importance of rigorous due diligence by investors and partners, who must look beyond marketing to verify technological and financial claims. For India’s tech talent, unfairly caught in the "Actual Indians" narrative, this is a reminder that ethical leadership is crucial to protect the reputation of a global innovation hub.
The Builder.ai saga is a stark lesson: no amount of funding or hype can sustain a business built on deception. As the AI industry moves forward, it must prioritize trust, integrity, and genuine innovation to avoid repeating this costly mistake.
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