Luis von Ahn – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Mon, 02 Jun 2025 19:30:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Luis von Ahn – 社区黑料 32 32 As Duolingo Turns to AI, Some Users Say Language App Has Joined 鈥楾he Dark Side鈥 /article/as-duolingo-turns-to-ai-some-users-say-language-app-has-joined-the-dark-side/ Tue, 03 Jun 2025 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1016408 Can artificial intelligence push the world鈥檚 most well-known language learning app to new heights 鈥 or will it lower quality and turn off loyal customers upset that language teachers鈥 jobs are being outsourced to bots? 

That鈥檚 a question Duolingo is grappling with this spring after an published in April to the job posting site LinkedIn revealed that the Pittsburgh-based company will become 鈥淎I-first,鈥 largely doing away with the human contractors who develop courses. In the meantime, it鈥檒l focus on using AI to run basic functions of its app, such as a new chatbot that engages users in live conversations in hundreds of languages. 

It鈥檚 perhaps the most extensive shift into AI to date for an education provider, representing a huge bet on the reliability of large language models that publicly debuted less than three years ago 鈥 and which remain notorious for .

Founded in 2011 at Carnegie Mellon University, Duolingo is now worth . Last year it boasted more than monthly active users. Its largest U.S. user group is under 18, but users span all ages. In 2016, Duolingo launched a free app .

Developers needed 12 years to develop the first 100 courses for its massively popular mobile phone app, known by its ubiquitous . Using AI, they created in just the past year, founder and CEO Luis von Ahn said in the email. Just as developing a mobile app in 2012 helped the company grow exponentially, he predicted the shift toward AI will prove equally significant.

To teach well, we need to create a massive amount of content, and doing that manually doesn鈥檛 scale.

Luis von Ahn, Duolingo CEO

鈥淭o teach well, we need to create a massive amount of content, and doing that manually doesn鈥檛 scale,鈥 von Ahn said in the email. Expanding without AI would take decades. 鈥淲e owe it to our learners to get them this content ASAP.鈥

To do so, Duolingo will gradually stop using human contractors 鈥渢o do work that AI can handle.鈥

While turning to AI may well accelerate course development, the move is angering veteran users who predict that replacing humans with bots will weaken the app with inaccurate, lower-quality content. In protest, many have threatened to delete it from their phones.

On Blue Sky, one user , 鈥淛ust dropped a 1 star review, f*** Duolingo for doing this.鈥

On X, a user wrote simply, 鈥淒uo joins the dark side.鈥

Users on X express their dissatisfaction with Duolingo鈥檚 move to be an 鈥淎I-first鈥 company.

Duolingo did not immediately respond to a request from 社区黑料 for comment. In a May 2 with Bloomberg News, von Ahn attributed the blowup among users to a 鈥渕isunderstanding,鈥 but his explanation for the move confirmed that the company will largely replace human course developers with AI, as users fear. 

鈥淲hat we said is that whenever there is some job that can be done by AI, and it can be done really well, then we’re unlikely to hire contractors to do that job,鈥 he said.

The announced policy won鈥檛 affect full-time employees, he said. 

Duolingo employs about 900 people and continues to grow as the company adds offerings in math, music and other subjects, , Duolingo鈥檚 vice president of learning, noted recently. 

But AI is forcing the company to ask essential questions, she said during a talk at the 2025 in April. 鈥淲e’re going to continue hiring people, but we’re going to be a little bit more intentional-thinking about what roles really are going to impact our business.鈥

We're going to continue hiring people, but we're going to be a little bit more intentional-thinking about what roles really are going to impact our business.

Bozena Pajak, Duolingo鈥檚 vice president of learning

So the company will focus on 鈥減eople who are very versatile鈥 and who are comfortable and 鈥渆xcited鈥 about AI, she said.

Cem Kansu, Duolingo鈥檚 head of product, last November that AI has been 鈥渢ransformational,鈥 helping the company quickly create new content and build interactive features.

The whole machine of content creation at Duolingo has gained insane speed in the past two years.

Cem Kansu, Duolingo鈥檚 head of product

鈥淭he whole machine of content creation at Duolingo has gained insane speed in the past two years.鈥

鈥楪uess I鈥檒l find different ways to learn鈥

In a last month with the tech podcast No Priors, von Ahn said Duolingo originally created a lot of content 鈥渉alf by hand, half automatically,鈥 making for a slow process.

AI, von Ahn said in the April memo, would help employees 鈥渇ocus on creative work and real problems, not repetitive tasks.鈥

The explanation may be too little too late for many users, who said the move to largely get rid of contractors who create courses was prompting them to stop using Duolingo, in many cases sacrificing valuable 鈥渟treaks鈥 of hundreds or thousands of consecutive days spent using the app. 

One , 鈥淲ell I just ended my family plan subscription & killed my 530 day streak. Guess I鈥檒l find different ways to learn.鈥 He added a waving hand emoji.

Another , 鈥淚n my opinion it is now complete rubbish 鈥 I have let go of my nearly 900 day streak and unsubscribed 鈥 bring back humans.鈥

The company its contractor workforce in January using AI, when it 鈥渙ffboarded鈥 10% of them, a company spokesman told Bloomberg. 鈥淲e just no longer need as many people to do the type of work some of these contractors were doing.鈥

An angry Duolingo user vents on X about the language app鈥檚 plans to become an 鈥淎I-first鈥 company

, an AI education specialist and language course designer based in Spain, said language teachers may rightly worry about the loss of nuance when AI is generating lessons. 鈥淟anguage isn鈥檛 only structure 鈥 it鈥檚 emotion, culture and tone,鈥 she wrote in a letter to her students that she shared with 社区黑料. 鈥淎I doesn鈥檛 always grasp that.鈥

But the move, Lucchesi said, offers a clear boost for access: 鈥淎 student in rural India can now learn English with support in Hindi, without waiting for a local instructor or textbook.鈥 

And while the benefits to 鈥渆ndless conversation practice鈥 and pronunciation feedback are clear, she said, that may only go so far. 鈥淟earning a language is social, emotional, and cultural. Motivation often comes from connection 鈥 a teacher who encourages you, a classmate who laughs with you, a shared context that makes words meaningful. AI can support that, but it can鈥檛 replace it.鈥

Language isn鈥檛 only structure 鈥 it鈥檚 emotion, culture and tone. AI doesn鈥檛 always grasp that.

Andy Lucchesi, AI education specialist

Benjamin Riley, a well-known AI-in-education skeptic, said it makes sense that generative AI would be incorporated by a language app, since Google engineers developed the breakthrough technology underlying it, known as , while working on translating human language.

鈥淚t’s a natural fit,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut the bigger question might be this: In a world where AI might 鈥 emphasis on might 鈥 be able to simultaneously translate between any two human languages, why would people bother to become bilingual at all?鈥

He invoked the science-fiction fantasy of the , a universal translator featured in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, which now seems 鈥渨ithin reach,鈥 he said, given current AI developments.

鈥淭he optimist might see this as reducing cross-cultural friction because we can all talk to one another. The pessimist might worry about languages dying because they aren’t prevalent enough to be fed into AI training models, and that something important will be lost if humans are monolingual.鈥

In a world where AI might be able to simultaneously translate between any two human languages, why would people bother to become bilingual at all?

Benjamin Riley, AI skeptic

Kansu, Duolingo鈥檚 head of product, said he鈥檚 not worried about AI making language learning obsolete, since even with the best translation service, workers must still wait for it to process speaking. 鈥淲ould you want to work with someone that has a 15-second lag in every interaction? I don’t think humans want that today.鈥

Chatting with Lily

At the ASU+GSV summit, Pajak, Duolingo鈥檚 vice president of learning, told an interviewer that large language models, or LLMs, made possible a new feature that allows users to converse in many languages with a . 鈥淚’m very excited about it. I use it almost every day to practice my Italian,鈥 she said.

Lily, an AI-generated character that engages in conversation with Duolingo users

A former language teacher, Pajak said that back-and-forth is key to learning a language. 鈥淵ou want to actually be able to speak鈥 to improve. 

User enthusiasm for the chats with Lily helped drive a 50% rise in subscriptions, the company said recently, noting that the bot is included in Duolingo鈥檚 most expensive tier.

, a nonresident senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute who specializes in AI, said Duolingo鈥檚 move seems smart. 鈥淟eaning into 鈥楢I-first鈥 is just an acknowledgement that these capabilities are only going to get better and cheaper over time,鈥 he said.

In the interview last month, von Ahn predicted that education systems will change over the next few years to offer better, more reliable feedback to students. AI, he said, will scale good teaching.

鈥淭here are extremely good teachers for sure, but there’s not very many of them 鈥 and certainly most everybody in the world doesn’t have access to a good one.鈥

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