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Wall Street loves when companies boast about using AI. But customers hate it.
Despite Duolingo’s exciting prospects, investors should keep an eye on several challenges. AI cost management is one: heavy use of third-party AI could squeeze margins if usage spikes faster ...
Without the company confronting the controversy elsewhere, though, the subtext of every cute social post is that the customers unhappy with Duolingo’s AI direction are not worth taking seriously.
Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn is making headlines after suggesting that Artificial Intelligence ( AI) will one day replace ...
Last month, Duolingo announced an AI-first shift, saying it would stop using contractors to do work AI can handle and only increase head count when teams have maximized all possible automation.
Duolingo is the latest company to spark backlash over its CEO's excitement about AI. Investors and Wall Street love hearing about companies' ambitious AI plans, but many customers hate it.
Language learning platform Duolingo has announced plans to go "AI-First," a strategy that will integrate AI into more of the company's workflow and eventually eliminate contract workers.
CEO Luis von Ahn highlighted the successful launch of 148 new language courses, developed using AI ... the market strategy for supplemental subjects and the overall penetration of Duolingo ...
In my previous article about Duolingo (NASDAQ:DUOL), I argued that despite a post-earnings stock drop of over 16% after Q4 2024, caused by an EPS miss and temporary margin dip tied to heavy AI ...
Language-learning app Duolingo has been leaning heavily into AI. The company with an owl mascot temporarily replaced its CEO with an AI avatar on an earnings call last year—and evenmore ...