NextFin

China’s LawGenesis Raises $10 Million to Expand AI Cognitive Security

Summarized by NextFin AI
  • LawGenesis, a Chinese AI startup, has raised approximately $10 million in angel funding to enhance its core product and expand its market presence.
  • The AI content security market in China is projected to reach $2.8 billion in 2024, growing over 35% annually, highlighting the demand for advanced security solutions.
  • LawGenesis aims to transform AI security from reactive to proactive, achieving 99.5% accuracy in content review with its flagship product by March 2025.
  • The company is focusing on enterprise clients, with 70% of revenue coming from this segment, while also exploring consumer market opportunities.

LawGenesis, a Chinese startup specializing in AI-driven cognitive security, has secured around $10 million in an angel funding round, according to people familiar with the matter.

Zhongnan Capital, Kaifeng Capital, and Planck Capital participated in the round, which will be used to develop the company’s core product, the “LawGenesis Principle,” expand its market footprint, and build a cognitive security community.

The startup is positioning itself at the forefront of a rapidly growing market. China’s AI content security sector reached roughly $2.8 billion in 2024, growing more than 35% annually, according to industry data. Traditional manual review systems are increasingly unable to keep pace with AI-generated content, which can now surge from tens to thousands of items per second.

“We’re not just replacing human reviewers,” said CEO Tan Yilang. “We’re turning them from reactive ‘firefighters’ into proactive ‘strategists.’ Our goal is to shift AI security from passive response to active defense.”

Since March 2024, LawGenesis has focused on building a continuously evolving cognitive security intelligent agent. Its flagship product, the LawGenesis Principle, reached 80% of human-level accuracy in September 2024, surpassed 95% by December, and hit 99.5% with the release of version 2.0 in March 2025. The company says it is the first in China to achieve high-precision, fully automated AI content review.

LawGenesis has partnerships with People.cn, Wuhan University’s School of Cyberspace Security, and the Wuhan Artificial Intelligence Research Institute. Its clients include platforms such as Douyin, Xiaohongshu, and Kusa AI. In one instance, deployment of the LawGenesis Principle allowed an e-commerce platform to triple efficiency in managing emerging content risks, cutting strategy adjustment time from three days to one.

The startup’s dual-engine product matrix serves both user-generated content (UGC) and AI-generated content (AIGC) markets. Its system reviews multimodal content, targets borderline cases such as financial scams, and reduces false positives, while overseas clients benefit from risk mitigation of more than 70% in text-to-image AI outputs.

“We can review complex content in 30 seconds, cutting costs by 60% compared with manual review,” Tan said. The platform supports one-click identification of 30 risk categories and can flag subtle manipulations that traditional models miss.

LawGenesis is also expanding multilingual capabilities to serve Belt and Road countries and exploring applications in news proofreading, government content screening, and consumer-level cognitive security. Its current business prioritizes enterprise clients, who account for roughly 70% of revenue, while testing consumer demand for long-term growth.

“The vision is a continuously evolving cognitive security ecosystem centered on human needs,” Tan said. “We aim to grow consumer adoption while maintaining enterprise services.”

Explore more exclusive insights at nextfin.ai.

Insights

What concepts underpin AI-driven cognitive security?

Where did the idea for LawGenesis originate?

What technical principles guide the functioning of LawGenesis's products?

What is the current market size of China's AI content security sector?

What feedback have users provided regarding LawGenesis's cognitive security solutions?

What recent trends are shaping the AI content security industry?

What recent funding has LawGenesis secured, and how will it be used?

What updates have been made to the LawGenesis Principle since its launch?

What changes in policies could impact the AI cognitive security sector?

What are the potential future directions for AI cognitive security technologies?

What long-term impacts could the growth of AI content security have on industries?

What challenges does LawGenesis face in the competitive landscape?

What limitations exist in current AI-driven content review systems?

What controversies surround the use of AI in content security?

How does LawGenesis compare to its competitors in cognitive security?

What historical cases can provide insights into the evolution of AI content security?

What similar concepts exist in the realm of cognitive security?

Search
NextFinNextFin
NextFin.Al
No Noise, only Signal.
Open App