
Sue Khim
CEO and co-founder of Brilliant, an education technology company focused on interactive STEM learning. She previously founded Alltuition and is publicly associated with Koji, Brilliant’s AI tutoring product for math and coding.
Brilliant’s Koji Uses AI to Make Students Solve Problems Themselves
Brilliant founder Sue Khim tells This Week in Startups that the company’s new AI tutor, Koji, is built to counter the education use case parents fear most: software that gives students answers while eroding their ability to think. Khim argues the opportunity is not generic AI in the classroom, but a constrained tutor embedded in Brilliant’s lessons that uses Socratic prompting, visual scaffolding, and assessment to help students solve problems themselves. Jason Calacanis frames the same idea more broadly, saying AI is useful when it strengthens the person doing the work rather than replacing the work.
YouTube Is Becoming Hollywood’s Talent Market and IP Proving Ground
TBPN’s John Coogan and Jordi Hays argue that YouTube is moving from Hollywood competitor to Hollywood’s talent market, where creator-led films prove creative judgment, production ability and audience response before studio capital arrives. The episode extends that pattern to AI policy, software and prediction markets: established institutions are trying to absorb signals formed outside their usual channels, from internet-proven filmmakers and frontier AI labs to traders and startups testing demand before regulators, studios or public markets have settled their response.