
A US-based Indian venture capitalist has stirred up a storm on social media after calling out fraudulent practices by two "desi" founders in San Francisco's startup ecosystem. Ash Arora, a LocalGlobe partner featured on the Forbes 30 Under 30 (Europe Finance) list, alleged that she met two Indian founders who were inflating metrics and fabricating client associations. She claimed that while one founder was subletting a rented apartment and falsely projecting the rent income as startup revenue, the other claimed that Amazon and Google had signed Letters of Intent with his firm, despite the tech giants reportedly having no knowledge of such deals.
"Have met two founders in SF this month. Both fraud: 1. Is subletting a rented apartment and showing that as revenue for his startup. 2. Is claiming Amazon and Google are clients who have signed LOIs when they have never even heard of them," Ash Arora wrote.
"What's common among them? Both desi men Beware of these people!" she continued, adding, "4 VCs have pinged me correctly guessing both these founder names. Is this Soham Parekh 2.0? We need a BS radar community out here."
4 VCs have pinged me correctly guessing both these founder names
— Ash Arora (@asharoraa) July 8, 2025
Is this Soham Parekh 2.0? We need a BS radar community out here.
The post quickly caught the internet's attention, sparking mixed reactions. Several users accused Ms Arora of unfairly singling out her own community.
"A sample of two. What's the point of including their race?" asked one user. "The 'desi men' part is a spicy take, but honestly, the patterns of fraud in SF are pretty universal. Desperation or greed, it always comes back to the same stuff," commented another.
However, Ms Arora defended her mention of the founders' ethnicity, saying, "Absolutely shocked to see egos being hurt here. The ONLY reason I mentioned them being desi was to ensure other people (and investors) are able to guess who these people are without actually naming and shaming them. The intention was to ensure people are staying away from these founders. That's it."
"As a desi myself, why in the world would I think lesser of my own community? It is dumb to think someone who is consistently proud of India, literally talks about successes every month and supports Indians in this world would ever want anything except progress for our ethnicity. Also, if we can't self criticize, who will? How will we ever fix something if we are too proud to acknowledge it? If a non Indian pointed out this 'jugaad' culture that is already present everywhere in our country, they would 100% be called racist in this woke environment. Didn't we cancel woke culture? Do better," she added.
Also Read | Indian-Origin Couple Living In US Wonders If Rs 25 Crore Is Enough To Retire In India, Internet Reacts
Others on social media expressed shock at the fraudulent practices. "I really don't understand. This way will never stay longer than few weeks or months. The end is dead. With life goal of genuinely making difference in whatever industry they are willing to do with perseverance is key to success. Shortcuts Never Works," wrote one user.
"What's the point of doing this? If you're severely inflating your revenue, you're only hurting yourself. You'll never truly validate your idea, and you'll keep pouring time and effort into the wrong direction," commented another.
Notably, Ms Arora's post comes days after Mixpanel founder Suhail Doshi publicly warned fellow entrepreneurs about software engineer Soham Parekh on X. Mr Doshi alleged that Parekh had worked at Mixpanel briefly before being fired and claimed that Parekh had been taking advantage of YC companies. Mr Doshi also shared Parekh's CV, questioning the authenticity of his portfolio, and arguing that probably 90% of the claims made in it are fake. Several other Silicon Valley founders, engineers, and hiring managers also accused Parekh of exploiting job opportunities for personal benefit
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world