Ai · Rest of World
The sender introduced me to an AI app called YiXiang, a digital version of the Chinese fortune-telling classic I Ching
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◌ Single Source
Rest of World could tell the email was sent by a bot.
Key facts
- In March, Shen started paying $199 a month for a Polsia subscription — that’s a steep 25% of his $800 monthly salary
- On the website, users can pay $2.99 to request life guidance, or get a $59 annual subscription — the AI agents answer the questions
- Shen Daojing, 38, has a full-time day job as a factory safety trainer
- More than half of spam emails were generated by AI, according to a 2025 study
Summary
The reporter kept hearing about entrepreneurs in China running “one-person companies” with the help of artificial intelligence agents, which handle everything from coding to managing emails. The sender introduced me to an AI app called YiXiang, a digital version of the Chinese fortune-telling classic the reporter Ching. The YiXiang “team” replied to their email, set a date, and provided a Google Meet link for a conversation. Tech enthusiasts globally are eager to have AI take over real-world tasks.