I just listened to Joshua Browder on Bob Ambrogi's Law Next podcast,¹ and ICYMI he pretty much admitted to doctoring the receipt from RIP Medical Debt when he confirmed that he didn't actually make the donation until 4 mins after @kathryntewson prodded him.²

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¹ https://lawnext.libsyn.com/ep-193-a-bit-of-a-nothingburger-joshua-browder-speaks-to-the-donotpay-controversy
² For context see https://www.techdirt.com/2023/01/30/donotpays-ceo-appears-to-modify-donation-receipt-after-being-called-out-on-unfulfilled-promise/

LawNext: Ep 193: ‘A Bit Of A Nothingburger’: Joshua Browder Speaks To The DoNotPay Controversy

On this episode of LawNext: , founder of . Browder achieved international recognition when, at just 17 years old in 2015, he founded DoNotPay, touted as the world’s first robot lawyer, to help people appeal parking tickets. The company claims the app has saved motorists in the U.S. and UK many millions of dollars. DoNotPay went on to release a series of apps designed to help consumers – and, more recently, small businesses – solve common legal problems, all without the need for a lawyer, and, along the way, it has raised some $28 million in venture funding. In recent weeks, however, Browder has been the subject of harsh criticism, both on social media and in the news media. The criticism came on two principal fronts. One was what many viewed as a pair of ill-conceived publicity stunts – first when Browder offered to pay a lawyer $1 million to argue a case in the Supreme Court guided via AirPods by DoNotPay’s artificial intelligence, and the other when Browder said he would send a pro se litigant into traffic court guided by DoNotPay’s AI whispering in his ear. He canceled that plan after claiming that state bar officials threatened him with prosecution.  Then came a by , a paralegal in Washington state who tried out several of DoNotPay’s self-help legal tools, only to conclude that they were effectively smoke and mirrors, in some cases getting the law wrong, in others failing even to deliver the promised product. Following all that, Browder announced that he was taking down the legal tools from DoNotPay and would henceforth focus only on consumer rights.  What does Browder say about all this? In this exclusive LawNext interview, he describes it all as “a bit of a nothingburger.”    Thank You To Our Sponsors This episode of LawNext is generously made possible by our sponsors. We appreciate their support and hope you will check them out.  , home to the practice management platforms , , and ; the e-payments platform ; and the legal accounting software . , providing legal client intake, law practice CRM, marketing automation, legal billing, document management, and much more, all in one easy-to-use law practice software.   If you enjoy listening to LawNext, please leave us a review wherever you listen to podcasts.  

Also the fact that he volunteered "four minutes" leads me to believe he did a very close reading either of @kathryntewson's tweets or @mmasnick's techdirt write up. Just an observation.
@Colarusso @kathryntewson so close that... he blatantly misrepresents Kathryn's claims, and keeps insisting that she said people were hand typing up each document (which is... not what she claimed)

@mmasnick I think he’s made clear he has a “flexible” relationship with the truth. Misrepresentation is consistent with such “flexibility.” Not a good look for the CEO of a company looking for user trust. “Sure, he lied about donating to charity, but if I hand over my credit card info, he says he’ll save me some money.”

@kathryntewson

@Colarusso @mmasnick @kathryntewson I mean, he’s currently encouraging people to lie to (by which I mean defraud) their banks to get their crypto money back. This is Cirque du Soleil levels of flexibility.
@sglassmeyer @Colarusso @mmasnick @kathryntewson What's this now? Weird to have banks be our white knight, but I wouldn't mind if they took him out.
Dan (Mastodon: [email protected]) on Twitter

“Ummmm @jbrowder1 why are you advising people to COMMIT ACTIONABLE FRAUD on their banks? Like the whole FTX thing sucks for the people who got had - but TELLING YOUR BANK YOU DIDN'T AUTHORIZE SOMETHING YOU DID is going to get people SUED OUT THE ASS!”

Twitter
@sglassmeyer @Colarusso Wow. We should stock up on popcorn.
@anseljh @Colarusso It's one thing to fuck over poor people and immigrants but banks? Good luck with that, pal.
@sglassmeyer @Colarusso I mean...this is conspiracy to commit wire fraud, right in the open. Right?
@anseljh @Colarusso not an expert but..yes. Yes, I think so.