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Bengaluru-based home services startup Pronto has pushed back against criticism over reports that some of its service professionals were recording videos inside customers’ homes as part of an AI training initiative, saying the programme is fully opt-in and compliant with India’s data protection rules.
— Harsh Upadhyay (@upadhyay_harsh1) May 22, 2026Important: How Pronto is turning Indian homes into training grounds for its investors’ Physical AI vision
Did you know? Pronto professionals use small outward-facing cameras during select opt-in jobs, and customers receive the footage afterward.
=> In an internal memo, Glade…
The controversy erupted after journalist Harsh Upadhyay alleged in a post on X that Pronto was “turning Indian homes into training grounds” for its investors’ Physical AI ambitions. The post claimed that Pronto professionals were using “small outward-facing cameras during select opt-in jobs”, triggering a wider debate around privacy and the use of AI training data inside private homes.
Must read: Are Snabbit, Urban Company, and Pronto fighting India’s next app war?
Responding to the criticism, Pronto said recordings are carried out only when customers explicitly agree to participate in the programme and pay for it separately.
Unless you have opted-in and paid for the program personally, the Pro doesn't come to the house with a camera. Opt in is not one time, it has to be affirmed before each booking. By default there is no camera involved, and when there is, it's impossible to miss. The pilot reaches… https://t.co/Fqnw76Mk4N
— Pronto (@withpronto) May 24, 2026
“Unless you have opted-in and paid for the program personally, the Pro doesn't come to the house with a camera. Opt in is not one time, it has to be affirmed before each booking. By default there is no camera involved, and when there is, it's impossible to miss,” the company said in a post on X.
The startup added that the pilot currently covers only “0.1% of customers” and claimed it spent “months to ensure full DPDP compliance”.
Founded in April 2025 by 23-year-old Anjali Sardana, Pronto operates a platform connecting households with domestic workers for services such as cleaning, laundry, mopping, utensil washing and bathroom cleaning.
The startup has rapidly scaled over the past year. Earlier this month, it raised $20 million in an extension round led by Lachy Groom, co-founder of AI robotics company Physical Intelligence and an early investor in Zepto.
Pronto has now closed its Series B funding round at $45 million, taking its valuation to $200 million, double the valuation it achieved roughly a month earlier. The company claims its daily bookings have risen to 26,000, while its workforce has expanded to 6,500 professionals. To date, it has raised around $60 million from investors including General Catalyst, Bain Capital Ventures, Glade Brook and Epiq Capital.
The backlash also prompted responses from Pronto’s competitors, who sought to distance themselves from the practice.
Urban Company CEO Abhiraj Singh Bhal said the company neither records inside customers’ homes nor plans to introduce such a system.
— Abhiraj Singh Bhal (@abhirajbhal) May 24, 2026In light of recent reports regarding recordings inside customers’ homes by one of our competitors, many people have asked whether @urbancompany_UC engages in anything similar, or intends to do so in the future.
The answer is clear and unequivocal: we do not.
We are in the…
“In light of recent reports regarding recordings inside customers’ homes by one of our competitors, many people have asked whether Urban Company engages in anything similar, or intends to do so in the future. The answer is clear and unequivocal: we do not,” Bhal wrote on X.
Similarly, Snabbit founder Aayush Agarwal said the company has “no intention” of deploying recording technology inside customers’ homes.
— Aayush Agarwal (@Aa_Agarwl) May 24, 2026Since this morning, people have reached out asking whether @just_snabbit does anything similar to the recent reports about a competitor recording inside customers' homes.
The answer is clear and unequivocal: We do not.
No customer's home has ever been recorded by us, in any…
“No customer's home has ever been recorded by us, in any way,” Agarwal said in a statement posted on X. “When customers let our Experts in, they place immense trust in us: that our Experts are verified, well-trained, and that their privacy is absolute.”
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Published on: May 25, 2026 1:30 PM IST
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