CTech — Israel's leading technology news outlet — published this roundup in direct response to the open letter signed by hundreds of AI researchers calling for a pause on advanced AI development due to "fundamental risk to humanity." Rather than engage in the abstract debate, CTech returned to its archive of "20 Minute Leaders" podcast interviews to spotlight founders who are actively using AI to solve real human problems.
Darrow and CEO Evyatar Ben Artzi are featured alongside six other Israeli AI companies working in areas spanning neurological disease diagnosis, climate intelligence, surgical safety, and cancer research. The framing is deliberate: these are companies where the social impact is not incidental to the business model but central to it.
Ben Artzi's inclusion reflects the editorial judgment that fighting injustice through AI belongs in the same conversation as curing diseases and cleaning water. The piece describes how Darrow's system scans the internet for public-interest legal violations — in areas including consumer rights, privacy, and environmental harm — and connects law firms with the evidence and analysis needed to pursue accountability through class action litigation. It briefly recounts the origin story: two lawyers who clerked together at the Israeli Supreme Court, frustrated by the system's inability to proactively surface the violations it was designed to address, who teamed up with a data scientist to build the intelligence layer the legal system lacked.