Ryan Carson Raises $2 Million for Untangle, Running 15 AI Agent Threads With No Hiring
Updated
Updated · O'Reilly Media · May 13
Ryan Carson Raises $2 Million for Untangle, Running 15 AI Agent Threads With No Hiring
1 articles · Updated · O'Reilly Media · May 13
$2 million in seed funding will back Untangle, Ryan Carson’s AI divorce assistant, even as he says he does not plan to hire staff.
15 active Devin threads now power Carson’s “code factory” model, with agents writing and reviewing code, running tests, triaging errors and monitoring production for about $2,000-$3,000 a month.
One automation signs up for Untangle every morning, runs all 14 tools and records the flow, while another scans Sentry and can launch a separate agent to fix problems.
Carson says AI has compressed work he once hired engineers and marketers to do, but it still cannot decide what product to build or replace domain expertise in software and divorce law.
Positive feedback from small family-law firms suggests the near-term impact may be automating paralegal-style overhead, potentially lowering divorce-service costs for consumers.
With no human staff, who is liable when an AI divorce assistant makes a critical legal error?
Should you trust your divorce to an AI with no human oversight, even if it saves you thousands?
Is the 'AI factory' the future of software, or a model doomed by AI's own unpredictability?