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Supporting and connecting women globally to create a sustainable and impactful economic ecosystem.
When women thrive, economies grow. Advancing gender equality will add $12 trillion to global GDP
This episode explores the intersection of AI, gender bias, and investment dynamics, focusing on recent AI scandals and their implications.
Kwamara and Shay discuss two major AI controversies: the Builder AI scandal involving fraudulent claims and inflated valuations, and Disney’s lawsuit against Midjourney regarding intellectual property infringement through AI-generated images. These cases serve as a backdrop to examine deeper systemic issues surrounding gender bias in funding, ethical challenges in AI development, and the need for more conscientious and equitable investment practices.
Builder AI’s scandal, where revenue was inflated by 300% and AI capabilities falsely represented, highlights significant lapses in due diligence by investors, despite red flags such as a founder’s prior fraud involvement. This scandal is emblematic of a broader pattern in the AI startup ecosystem, where hype-driven investments may be overshadowing ethical and technical rigor. The discussion reveals how male-led companies often receive disproportionate access to capital despite questionable practices, while women-led startups, despite statistically delivering better returns and more sustainable growth, struggle to secure funding, receiving only about 2% of venture capital.
The episode also delves into the Midjourney lawsuit, which raises complex questions about copyright, intellectual property, and AI training data ethics. As AI-generated content increasingly challenges traditional notions of ownership and creativity, the legal battles set important precedents for how AI technologies will be regulated and integrated into creative industries. The hosts emphasize the tension between the economic motives driving rapid AI advancement and the ethical imperatives that must guide its development, particularly in addressing biases that disproportionately affect marginalized groups, such as dark-skinned women experiencing higher error rates in facial recognition AI.
The conversation underscores the need for a systematic, multi-stakeholder approach involving governments, investors, companies, and users to promote ethical AI practices, safeguard rights, and mitigate gender bias. The importance of critical thinking, transparency, and active user participation in flagging biases within AI systems is emphasized as a practical step toward improvement. The hosts also explore the challenges women founders face in pitching and securing investment, noting that while pitching can offer a more effective platform to communicate nuanced, emotional aspects of their ventures, the prevailing investor mindset often prioritizes hard data and risk mitigation over human values and company culture.
Ultimately, the episode calls for a shift in how AI and investment ecosystems operate—favoring ethical, sustainable innovation and greater inclusion of women and diverse perspectives. It encourages continuous education, self-awareness, and community engagement to build AI systems that benefit everyone equitably.
This conversation serves as a call to action for all stakeholders—founders, investors, users, and policymakers—to rethink how AI is developed, funded, and deployed, with a focus on ethics, gender equity, and long-term societal benefit.
Highlights 🤖 Builder AI scandal revealed revenue inflation by 300% and false claims about AI capabilities. 💸 Women-led startups receive only 2% of venture capital but tend to yield better, more sustainable returns. 🏛️ Disney sued Midjourney over unauthorized use of copyrighted characters in AI-generated images, raising IP and copyright issues. ⚖️ AI systems show significant gender and racial biases, with higher error rates for dark-skinned women in facial recognition technologies. 🔍 Lack of investor due diligence and overreliance on pedigree and hype contribute to funding scandals in AI startups. 🎤 Women...
Women Invest in Women
Supporting and connecting women globally to create a sustainable and impactful economic ecosystem.
When women thrive, economies grow. Advancing gender equality will add $12 trillion to global GDP