To show off how easy it is for users to earn money by using his new chatbot platform, Pankaj Gupta offers to cash out $1 worth of Yupp credits, sending it to me over Venmo or PayPal. I’m talking with Gupta in the WIRED office during a prelaunch demo of Yupp, which comes out of stealth mode today. Journalistic ethics forbid accepting gifts from sources, so I politely decline. He proceeds to send it over PayPal to his Stanford alumni email.
Gupta is the CEO of Yupp, which is free to use and available globally. The website looks similar to other generative AI tools like ChatGPT. There’s a prompt box, a way to attach files, and a log of past conversations.
The main difference is that every time users ask Yupp a question, they’ll see two answers, generated by two different models and displayed side by side. Yupp routes prompts to a pair of LLMs, choosing from a pool of over 500 models that includes products from leading US generative AI companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, as well as international releases, like models from Alibaba, DeepSeek, and Mistral.
After looking over the two answers, users pick the response they like best, then provide feedback explaining why. For their effort, they earn a digital scratch card with Yupp credits.
"You're not being employed, but you can make a little bit of money,” says Gupta. In my testing, the Yupp credits on the scratch cards typically ranged from zero to around 250, though they occasionally went higher. Every 1,000 credits can be exchanged for $1. Users can cash out a maximum of $10 a day and $50 a month.
Courtesy of Yupp
Not sure where to start while testing this web app, I turned to the range of pre-written topics flickering beneath Yupp’s prompt bar, which spanned from news topics, like David Hogg leaving the DNC, to ideas for image-creation prompts, like generating a crochet-looking surfer. (Yupp’s models can generate text or images.) I eventually chose to have the bots explain different perspectives on the current Los Angeles protests.