May 23, 2026

AI co-founder or AI clown car?

Polsia raised $30M; source map: fake ARR, dead users, god-mode over your company

Startup chaos erupts as commenters call Polsia a parody, a scam, and a giant off-switch waiting to happen

TLDR: A report claims Polsia raised $30 million while exaggerating its revenue, relying on lots of abandoned customer companies, and keeping sweeping control over businesses built on its platform. Commenters are torn between calling it a familiar scam and laughing that the whole thing sounds like parody, especially because the company name appears to spell “AI slop” backward.

The internet did what it does best after this Polsia bombshell: it immediately split into Team “this is devastating” and Team “there is no way this is real.” The allegations are wild even in plain English: a startup that says it builds businesses with artificial intelligence is accused of puffing up its revenue numbers, counting mostly abandoned companies, and keeping a master control panel that could pause, impersonate, or even delete customer companies. That alone would spark drama. But the comments turned it into a full-on popcorn event.

The harshest reaction was basically: “we’ve seen this movie before.” One commenter compared it to crypto scams all over again, which is about as subtle as throwing a chair through a window. Another huge source of comedy was the name itself: multiple people pointed out that “Polsia” is “AI slop” backwards, and suddenly the whole thing started sounding less like a startup and more like an internet prank with venture capital money attached. Some readers were howling at the absurdity; others were deeply unimpressed.

But not everyone bought the exposé cleanly. A skeptical camp said the over-the-top presentation made the claims harder to trust, with one commenter mocking the accuser for using a flashy, AI-made-looking site to denounce AI slop. In other words: even the takedown got dragged. The result is delicious tech-forum chaos — half the crowd yelling “fraud,” the other half asking whether everyone is getting baited by the world’s most expensive parody startup.

Key Points

  • The article says Polsia raised $30 million while marketing itself at about $10 million ARR and over 120,000 companies created.
  • It argues the headline ARR figure annualizes one month of cash flow, while Polsia’s own recurring metric is lower at $4.63 million and monthly paid churn is about 48%.
  • The article states that, under that churn, only 0.04% of the paying base survives 12 months, so revenue that truly recurs a year out is effectively near zero.
  • It says a public production source map exposed 1,355 modules, including internal admin tools, human QA or reviewer workflows, operator logins, and override capabilities.
  • The article reports that only 7,437 of 118,683 companies were active, or 6.3%, and says weekly ARR additions had declined from a peak of $894,000 to $347,000, with the latest seven-day increase at $282,000.

Hottest takes

"This is crypto scams all over again." — ungreased0675
"The company name is aislop in reverse." — miohtama
"This has to be a parody" — sikozu
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