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The cursed world of AI kiss and hug apps

The cursed world of AI kiss and hug apps

Doomscroll on TikTok long enough, and you’ll come across an ad for AI video apps. In one ad, a stereotypically nerdy girl puckishly smirks as she uploads a picture of herself and her much more handsome crush. Boom — suddenly, thanks to AI, they’re smooching. In another, I’m shown a woman in a blouse and jeans. Do I want to know what she looks like in a blue bikini? Psst. There’s an app for that. The ad then shows me the woman in said blue bikini.

These apps aren’t peddling the digital nudes many people associate with AI deepfakes, which are proliferating in their own right on app stores. Slapped together by opportunistic developers and sprinkled with subscription fees and microtransactions, they’re all pitching tools to help you make benign fantasies a bit more tangible — but the results feel more cursed than magical.

AI video ads link out to apps with titles like Boom.AI, VideoAI, and DreamVid, made by companies you’ve probably never heard of — a short perusal of Apple’s App Store brings up roughly two dozen options. Despite their titillating promotional material, they feature plenty of innocuous video templates. By uploading one or two photos and hitting a “generate” button, you can change your hair color, hold up a sign, or hug Goku from Dragon Ball Z. But for every one of those, there are several other subtly disturbing or sort of gross ones. In the DreamVid app, there’s an Enhance option that lets you give a person bigger breasts. In the preview, a blonde with a B cup is shown getting an automatic boob job, smiling playfully as she jiggles her new DD size. The AI Dancing category in the same app has scantily clad women suggestively swaying their hips.

It’s a mix that feels calculated. Just when you think there’s too many bikinis and breasts, you’ll see templates featuring cuddly AI cats, Studio Ghibli-style filters, and wholesome grandmas to hug. At the same time, when you look at DreamVid’s AI outfit-of-the-day option, six of 12 outfits are some form of bikini or bathing suit. The rest include skimpy maid outfits, lingerie, a schoolgirl uniform, and gothic lolita cosplay. Only the wedding dress and cheongsam are relatively benign. None of them are aimed at creating pictures of men.

You can faceswap anyone onto these dancing models, or kiss a celebrity (or cartoon character?)
Screenshot: DreamVid, Boom.AI

In the ads, the videos generated are in that hazy category of “real enough” to make you uncomfortable yet curious enough to download. Try it yourself and you’ll see the telltale AI cracks appear. Kissing looks awkward — like how a toddler imagines kissing, faces and lips rhythmically smooshing together. (The few that attempt French kissing prove AI really doesn’t know what to do with tongues yet.) Hugs look stiff, with dubious limb and hand placements. If the photos don’t line up, hilarious zoom effects ensue as AI tries to match up bodies. Clothing, hair, accessories, and facial features often morph in and out of existence mid-video.

AI systems have a long-standing racial bias issue, and pairing up subjects of different races seems to confuse these apps. My non-Asian celebrity crushes sometimes spontaneously developed Asian features when I joined them in a video. Other times, the app morphed my features into more Eurocentric ones to match my spouse. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry that multiple AI apps insist that kissing parties should generally be the same race. I do, however, feel insulted when it generates a video of my spouse proposing to me — but has them turn away and propose to a random, spontaneously appearing white woman instead.

None of this comes for free. The majority of apps charge microtransaction fees and subscriptions that range from $2.99 to $7.99 per week or $49.99 to $69.99 annually, providing limited credits that you can spend to generate videos. It’s a financial model similar to that of AI nudes apps, even if the content is different.

If you’re curious about where those funds are going, one deep dive into the Videa: AI Video Maker app traced its origins to a company called Pure Yazlim Limited Sirketi that’s based out of Istanbul, Turkey. Boom.AI is run by a company called NineG, which describes itself as “non-gaming app publishing” on its barebones website. Its app store listing also touts the Mozart AI song generator, art generator Plum AI, an AI font creator, and, randomly, Reel TV — a Quibi-esque app for short dramas. DreamVid is run by Shenzhen iMyFone Technology Co.Ltd., which also has a suite of what seems to be productivity and utility apps, plus a Studio Ghibi generator. The Verge reached out to both NineG and iMyFone but didn’t receive a response.

In exchange, you get something infinitely simpler and more permissive than all-purpose video generators like OpenAI’s Sora. You can theoretically produce a kiss on Sora, but only after crafting a text prompt describing what you want, uploading photos for the tool to work with, and clicking through pop-ups asking if you’re over 18 and have consent to use the material you’re uploading — and even then, Sora flagged me smooching Edward Cullen as a potential policy violation. Google’s Veo is much the same. I tried the Edward Cullen kiss test, and Veo refused, saying it would reject prompts that are sexually suggestive, nonconsensual acts, or those that promote harmful stereotypes. On these other apps, you don’t even need to come up with the idea — just upload a couple of pictures, and the system will deliver what you want.

Simple apps for creating deepfaked nudes have produced numerous instances of clear harm, including widespread harassment of women and teen girls. Some of these incidents have led to lawsuits and arrests. There are also legal efforts to crack down on AI-generated nudes and unauthorized “digital replicas” of real people, including the recently signed Take It Down Act, the No Fakes Act, and a bill passed by the New York State Senate.

These apps are unlikely to fall under the purview of anti-deepfake porn laws, though the frequent appearances of celebrities — Boom.AI offered templates that let you make out with both Robert Pattinson as Edward Cullen and Timothee Chalamet — make their status under digital replica rules shakier. For now, they sit in a murky zone between app store and platform moderation policies. Major tech companies have lagged on removing even sexually explicit AI generators, and the status of anything milder on their platforms seems nebulous.

Google spokesperson Danielle Cohen tells The Verge that the Google Play Store doesn’t allow apps that contain content or services that could be intended as sexually gratifying, and companies aren’t allowed to use sexually explicit ads (including AI-generated ones) to direct people to their Play Store listings.

Apple’s App Store guidelines state apps shouldn’t contain content that is “offensive, insensitive, upsetting, intended to disgust, in exceptionally poor taste, or just plain creepy.” Provided examples include “mean-spirited” content, as well as “explicit descriptions or displays of sexual organs or activities intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” There are no rules about ads for these apps.

I sent Meta an example of an ad for a kiss and hug AI app I found on Instagram Reels. In response, Meta spokesperson Faith Eischen told The Verge, “We have clear rules against nudity and sexual exploitation, including non-consensual intimate imagery — both real and AI-generated — and we’ve removed the shared piece of content for breaking our rules.” Eischen also noted that Meta removes such ads when notified, disables accounts responsible for them, and blocks links to sites hosting such apps.

The Verge reached out to TikTok about its policies but didn’t receive a response.

While it’s fraught to create sexually charged images of celebrities, it overlaps with the existing territory of fan art and meme-ification. Many of these apps’ functions, though, tread in more uncomfortable territory. While it might not be overly pornographic, it’s creepy to deepfake yourself kissing someone. It would be even creepier to do it to a friend or acquaintance who didn’t consent to it. But it’s also not really clear what the average user is looking for — most reviews are simply complaining about the microtransactions.

Moderating this sort of content is kind of like whack-a-mole. Boom.AI had plenty of “use AI to kiss your crush” ads several weeks ago. Now, all the ones I bookmarked have disappeared from social media. Within the app itself, I can no longer generate any kind of kissing video. Instead, the app moved on to ads of a suburban mom twerking, before they, too, were subsequently removed.

Experimenting with AI video apps wasn’t always creepy. Few people would object if everyone was using them to generate heartwarming videos of kids hugging their grandparents; you could argue that it’s weird to want to do this, but it’s not inherently wrong or illegal.

But the fun or arguably helpful use cases are mixed in almost inextricably with the creepy stuff. Changing my hair is a pretty unobjectionable process, but it’s unsettling to swap my own face onto a model “dancing” while wearing cat ears, a plunging crop top that shows off her midriff and bra, hot pants, and lacy garters. (Leonardo DiCaprio’s face on the model is perhaps less disturbing than simply unhinged.) Conversely, I’ve had genderqueer friends say they privately used AI templates that let them see what they’d look like as a different gender, and it helped them figure out their feelings. Even the kissing templates could have fairly innocuous uses — you could be a fiction writer seeking inspiration for a romance novel. In that case, what’s the difference between drawing your own fan art and using an AI video generator? Perhaps, you’re trying to process something and need a little visual help — and that’s how I ended up deepfaking my dead parents.

In a plot stolen straight from The Farewell, my mom died before my grandmother, and my family decided not to tell her out of fear she’d drop dead from shock. But whereas that film dealt in regular white lies, my family decided to update its deception for the modern era. When my grandma started lamenting that my mom had stopped calling, a cousin asked me if there was any chance that I, a tech reporter, could use AI to create video messages of my mother. That would, my cousin said, give my dementia-addled grandma some sense of peace. At the time, I told her it wasn’t possible.

Three years later, I finally generated the deepfake she requested while testing these apps. It was eerie how much it looked like my mom, except when she smiled. My real mother was self-conscious of her underbite. AI mom’s teeth were perfect. All I could see were the ways that AI had failed to capture my mother’s essence. I thought my cousin would feel the same way. Instead, the text I got in response was four hearts interspersed with several exclamation marks and crying face emojis. For her, the horrible deepfake was comforting. My mom would’ve hated this AI version of herself, and yet in the days after creating it, I found myself replaying it over and over — if only because spotting what the AI got wrong reminded me that I hadn’t forgotten the real her.

I found myself replaying it over and over — if only because spotting what the AI got wrong reminded me that I hadn’t forgotten the real her.

After that, I deepfaked my dad hugging me at my wedding. Some little girls dream of their fathers walking them down the aisle. Mine died before that day ever came, and I didn’t make it to his deathbed in time for a proper goodbye. I wondered if deepfaking dad would give me a sense of closure. I used the last good photo I had of him, taken a few days before he passed, and a solo photo of me from my wedding.

The AI did a horrible job. For one, it interpreted my dad’s beanie as a thick shock of black hair. In my family, we teased him for his thin combover and fivehead — which, in his broken English, he insisted was proof he was a true “egghead.” I tried again and got a slightly better result. Still, the pattern on his sweater changed. His facial features morphed into someone who looked close, but ultimately wasn’t my dad. Even so, it made me cry. The AI got so many things wrong, but it was good enough to sketch the shape of my longing. This, too, I sent to my cousin, who replied back with even more crying emoji.

AI evangelists tout this as a positive use case for AI. Wouldn’t it be nice to reanimate your dead loved ones? Before deepfaking my parents, I’d have scoffed and said this is a dystopian premise that denies the humanity of our mortality. But all I can say now is that grief is a strange beast. I’d be lying if I said that I found comfort in these deepfakes, but I can’t deny that a part of me was moved. I’m also no longer inclined to describe this as a bad way to use AI; it’s just weird.

Perhaps the question isn’t whether these apps are inherently harmful or what platforms should do when they appear. Maybe it’s a matter of asking what we’re hoping to see of ourselves reflected in them.



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#cursed #world #kiss #hug #apps

Truecaller has opened a public fight with India’s telecom regulator over rules governing caller ID apps, saying the country’s anti-spam framework is making it harder to protect consumers from unwanted calls in its biggest market.

On Wednesday, CEO Rishit Jhunjhunwala (pictured above) took to X to publicly challenge the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), accusing the watchdog of preventing Truecaller from displaying community-reported spam information for calls from the country’s dedicated 1400 and 1600 number series, a restriction he said had enabled abuse of those numbers and eroded trust in legitimate business calls.

The dispute stems from a framework introduced in 2024 under which India’s telecom authorities designated the 1400 and 1600 number series for commercial communications, with businesses using the former for telemarketing calls and the latter for service- and transaction-related calls. TRAI later mandated the migration to the dedicated numbering series, saying the move would help consumers identify legitimate business communications and curb spam and scam calls.

The framework was rolled out amid growing concerns over spam and scam calls in India, one of the world’s largest telecom markets, where regulators and telecom operators have rolled out multiple measures to curb fraudulent communications. Last year, the Indian communications ministry said authorities disconnected more than 2.1 million fraudulent mobile numbers and took action against more than 100,000 entities over the preceding year, underscoring the scale of the challenge.

Jhunjhunwala argued the policy has produced unintended consequences. Citing internal company data, he said consumers have increasingly lost trust in the designated number series, with Truecaller users ignoring 81% of calls from the 1400 series and 79% from the 1600 series over the past eight months. During the same period, users manually blocked 74 million calls from the two number series, while daily blocking actions against 1600-series numbers have more than tripled since October 2025, he said.

Unable to mark those numbers as spam, Truecaller instead introduced a “Frequently Blocked” badge to alert users when a number from the designated series has been blocked by many people.

The unusually public criticism came after Indian business daily The Economic Times reported that TRAI had sought powers under India’s Information Technology Act to take action against caller ID apps such as Truecaller, Hiya, and Whoscall for labeling numbers from the designated 1400 and 1600 series as spam.

TRAI and India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, which would consider any such proposal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The dispute comes at a pivotal time for Truecaller, whose core caller ID business has been facing growing regulatory and competitive pressures as the company expands into new products and services. India remains its largest market by a wide margin, with more than 350 million of its 500 million monthly active users based in the country, according to the company.

Jhunjhunwala said Truecaller would share its data with the Indian IT ministry as part of the regulatory process, arguing that any decision on caller ID apps should be evidence-based.

“Penalize the bad actors, not the ones like Truecaller that make a significant positive impact,” he wrote.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

#Truecaller #clashes #Indias #telecom #regulator #antispam #rules #TechCrunchTruecaller,MeitY,TRAI">Truecaller clashes with India’s telecom regulator over anti-spam rules | TechCrunch
Truecaller has opened a public fight with India’s telecom regulator over rules governing caller ID apps, saying the country’s anti-spam framework is making it harder to protect consumers from unwanted calls in its biggest market.

On Wednesday, CEO Rishit Jhunjhunwala (pictured above) took to X to publicly challenge the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), accusing the watchdog of preventing Truecaller from displaying community-reported spam information for calls from the country’s dedicated 1400 and 1600 number series, a restriction he said had enabled abuse of those numbers and eroded trust in legitimate business calls.







The dispute stems from a framework introduced in 2024 under which India’s telecom authorities designated the 1400 and 1600 number series for commercial communications, with businesses using the former for telemarketing calls and the latter for service- and transaction-related calls. TRAI later mandated the migration to the dedicated numbering series, saying the move would help consumers identify legitimate business communications and curb spam and scam calls.

The framework was rolled out amid growing concerns over spam and scam calls in India, one of the world’s largest telecom markets, where regulators and telecom operators have rolled out multiple measures to curb fraudulent communications. Last year, the Indian communications ministry said authorities disconnected more than 2.1 million fraudulent mobile numbers and took action against more than 100,000 entities over the preceding year, underscoring the scale of the challenge.

Jhunjhunwala argued the policy has produced unintended consequences. Citing internal company data, he said consumers have increasingly lost trust in the designated number series, with Truecaller users ignoring 81% of calls from the 1400 series and 79% from the 1600 series over the past eight months. During the same period, users manually blocked 74 million calls from the two number series, while daily blocking actions against 1600-series numbers have more than tripled since October 2025, he said.

Unable to mark those numbers as spam, Truecaller instead introduced a “Frequently Blocked” badge to alert users when a number from the designated series has been blocked by many people.

The unusually public criticism came after Indian business daily The Economic Times reported that TRAI had sought powers under India’s Information Technology Act to take action against caller ID apps such as Truecaller, Hiya, and Whoscall for labeling numbers from the designated 1400 and 1600 series as spam.


TRAI and India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, which would consider any such proposal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The dispute comes at a pivotal time for Truecaller, whose core caller ID business has been facing growing regulatory and competitive pressures as the company expands into new products and services. India remains its largest market by a wide margin, with more than 350 million of its 500 million monthly active users based in the country, according to the company.

Jhunjhunwala said Truecaller would share its data with the Indian IT ministry as part of the regulatory process, arguing that any decision on caller ID apps should be evidence-based.







“Penalize the bad actors, not the ones like Truecaller that make a significant positive impact,” he wrote.
When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.#Truecaller #clashes #Indias #telecom #regulator #antispam #rules #TechCrunchTruecaller,MeitY,TRAI

took to X to publicly challenge the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), accusing the watchdog of preventing Truecaller from displaying community-reported spam information for calls from the country’s dedicated 1400 and 1600 number series, a restriction he said had enabled abuse of those numbers and eroded trust in legitimate business calls.

The dispute stems from a framework introduced in 2024 under which India’s telecom authorities designated the 1400 and 1600 number series for commercial communications, with businesses using the former for telemarketing calls and the latter for service- and transaction-related calls. TRAI later mandated the migration to the dedicated numbering series, saying the move would help consumers identify legitimate business communications and curb spam and scam calls.

The framework was rolled out amid growing concerns over spam and scam calls in India, one of the world’s largest telecom markets, where regulators and telecom operators have rolled out multiple measures to curb fraudulent communications. Last year, the Indian communications ministry said authorities disconnected more than 2.1 million fraudulent mobile numbers and took action against more than 100,000 entities over the preceding year, underscoring the scale of the challenge.

Jhunjhunwala argued the policy has produced unintended consequences. Citing internal company data, he said consumers have increasingly lost trust in the designated number series, with Truecaller users ignoring 81% of calls from the 1400 series and 79% from the 1600 series over the past eight months. During the same period, users manually blocked 74 million calls from the two number series, while daily blocking actions against 1600-series numbers have more than tripled since October 2025, he said.

Unable to mark those numbers as spam, Truecaller instead introduced a “Frequently Blocked” badge to alert users when a number from the designated series has been blocked by many people.

The unusually public criticism came after Indian business daily The Economic Times reported that TRAI had sought powers under India’s Information Technology Act to take action against caller ID apps such as Truecaller, Hiya, and Whoscall for labeling numbers from the designated 1400 and 1600 series as spam.

TRAI and India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, which would consider any such proposal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The dispute comes at a pivotal time for Truecaller, whose core caller ID business has been facing growing regulatory and competitive pressures as the company expands into new products and services. India remains its largest market by a wide margin, with more than 350 million of its 500 million monthly active users based in the country, according to the company.

Jhunjhunwala said Truecaller would share its data with the Indian IT ministry as part of the regulatory process, arguing that any decision on caller ID apps should be evidence-based.

“Penalize the bad actors, not the ones like Truecaller that make a significant positive impact,” he wrote.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

#Truecaller #clashes #Indias #telecom #regulator #antispam #rules #TechCrunchTruecaller,MeitY,TRAI">Truecaller clashes with India’s telecom regulator over anti-spam rules | TechCrunch

Truecaller has opened a public fight with India’s telecom regulator over rules governing caller ID apps, saying the country’s anti-spam framework is making it harder to protect consumers from unwanted calls in its biggest market.

On Wednesday, CEO Rishit Jhunjhunwala (pictured above) took to X to publicly challenge the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), accusing the watchdog of preventing Truecaller from displaying community-reported spam information for calls from the country’s dedicated 1400 and 1600 number series, a restriction he said had enabled abuse of those numbers and eroded trust in legitimate business calls.

The dispute stems from a framework introduced in 2024 under which India’s telecom authorities designated the 1400 and 1600 number series for commercial communications, with businesses using the former for telemarketing calls and the latter for service- and transaction-related calls. TRAI later mandated the migration to the dedicated numbering series, saying the move would help consumers identify legitimate business communications and curb spam and scam calls.

The framework was rolled out amid growing concerns over spam and scam calls in India, one of the world’s largest telecom markets, where regulators and telecom operators have rolled out multiple measures to curb fraudulent communications. Last year, the Indian communications ministry said authorities disconnected more than 2.1 million fraudulent mobile numbers and took action against more than 100,000 entities over the preceding year, underscoring the scale of the challenge.

Jhunjhunwala argued the policy has produced unintended consequences. Citing internal company data, he said consumers have increasingly lost trust in the designated number series, with Truecaller users ignoring 81% of calls from the 1400 series and 79% from the 1600 series over the past eight months. During the same period, users manually blocked 74 million calls from the two number series, while daily blocking actions against 1600-series numbers have more than tripled since October 2025, he said.

Unable to mark those numbers as spam, Truecaller instead introduced a “Frequently Blocked” badge to alert users when a number from the designated series has been blocked by many people.

The unusually public criticism came after Indian business daily The Economic Times reported that TRAI had sought powers under India’s Information Technology Act to take action against caller ID apps such as Truecaller, Hiya, and Whoscall for labeling numbers from the designated 1400 and 1600 series as spam.

TRAI and India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, which would consider any such proposal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The dispute comes at a pivotal time for Truecaller, whose core caller ID business has been facing growing regulatory and competitive pressures as the company expands into new products and services. India remains its largest market by a wide margin, with more than 350 million of its 500 million monthly active users based in the country, according to the company.

Jhunjhunwala said Truecaller would share its data with the Indian IT ministry as part of the regulatory process, arguing that any decision on caller ID apps should be evidence-based.

“Penalize the bad actors, not the ones like Truecaller that make a significant positive impact,” he wrote.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

#Truecaller #clashes #Indias #telecom #regulator #antispam #rules #TechCrunchTruecaller,MeitY,TRAI
ASUS ExpertBook Deals During Flipkart GOAT Sale

The discounts span multiple price segments, making the lineup suitable for everyone from students and startups to enterprise users. ASUS says some models are available at up to 28.5% off, with prices starting at ₹45,990.

The biggest offers are available on the premium ExpertBook Ultra, where buyers can claim bank discounts of up to ₹20,000, exchange bonuses of up to ₹20,000, and up to 24 months of No Cost EMI. ASUS is also bundling its 5+5+5 service package with the laptop for a limited time.

Meanwhile, selected ExpertBook P-series models are available with discounts of up to ₹34,000 during the sale.

ASUS ExpertBook Ultra Is Built for AI Workloads

ASUS ExpertBook Laptops Get Discounts Up to ₹34,000 During Flipkart GOAT Sale
	
If you’ve been looking to buy a business laptop, ASUS has rolled out a bunch of discounts on its ExpertBook lineup as part of the ongoing Flipkart GOAT Sale. The company is offering deals across 42 ExpertBook models, including the flagship ExpertBook Ultra and the ExpertBook P1, P3, and P5 series. Alongside instant discounts, buyers can also take advantage of exchange offers, cashback, and No Cost EMI options.



ASUS ExpertBook Deals During Flipkart GOAT Sale



The discounts span multiple price segments, making the lineup suitable for everyone from students and startups to enterprise users. ASUS says some models are available at up to 28.5% off, with prices starting at ₹45,990.



The biggest offers are available on the premium ExpertBook Ultra, where buyers can claim bank discounts of up to ₹20,000, exchange bonuses of up to ₹20,000, and up to 24 months of No Cost EMI. ASUS is also bundling its 5+5+5 service package with the laptop for a limited time.



Meanwhile, selected ExpertBook P-series models are available with discounts of up to ₹34,000 during the sale.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra Is Built for AI Workloads







Sitting at the top of the lineup is the ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine. 



It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.



The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.



ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget







While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.



Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.



Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.



Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals



Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:




ASUS ExpertBook P1403CVA – Available from ₹55,990, saving buyers ₹6,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P3406CCAP – Now priced at ₹84,990, down by ₹10,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P5405CAA – Available for ₹1,89,990 with a ₹25,000 discount.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra – Starts at ₹2,39,990 and qualifies for additional bank discounts, exchange offers, No Cost EMI, and ASUS’ bundled 5+5+5 service package.






#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus

Sitting at the top of the lineup is the ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine.

It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.

The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.

ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget

Asus ExpertBook P3 featured image

While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.

Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.

Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.

Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals

Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:

#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus">ASUS ExpertBook Laptops Get Discounts Up to ₹34,000 During Flipkart GOAT Sale
	
If you’ve been looking to buy a business laptop, ASUS has rolled out a bunch of discounts on its ExpertBook lineup as part of the ongoing Flipkart GOAT Sale. The company is offering deals across 42 ExpertBook models, including the flagship ExpertBook Ultra and the ExpertBook P1, P3, and P5 series. Alongside instant discounts, buyers can also take advantage of exchange offers, cashback, and No Cost EMI options.



ASUS ExpertBook Deals During Flipkart GOAT Sale



The discounts span multiple price segments, making the lineup suitable for everyone from students and startups to enterprise users. ASUS says some models are available at up to 28.5% off, with prices starting at ₹45,990.



The biggest offers are available on the premium ExpertBook Ultra, where buyers can claim bank discounts of up to ₹20,000, exchange bonuses of up to ₹20,000, and up to 24 months of No Cost EMI. ASUS is also bundling its 5+5+5 service package with the laptop for a limited time.



Meanwhile, selected ExpertBook P-series models are available with discounts of up to ₹34,000 during the sale.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra Is Built for AI Workloads







Sitting at the top of the lineup is the ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine. 



It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.



The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.



ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget







While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.



Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.



Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.



Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals



Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:




ASUS ExpertBook P1403CVA – Available from ₹55,990, saving buyers ₹6,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P3406CCAP – Now priced at ₹84,990, down by ₹10,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P5405CAA – Available for ₹1,89,990 with a ₹25,000 discount.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra – Starts at ₹2,39,990 and qualifies for additional bank discounts, exchange offers, No Cost EMI, and ASUS’ bundled 5+5+5 service package.






#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus

ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine.

It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.

The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.

ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget

Asus ExpertBook P3 featured image

While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.

Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.

Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.

Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals

Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:

#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus">ASUS ExpertBook Laptops Get Discounts Up to ₹34,000 During Flipkart GOAT Sale

If you’ve been looking to buy a business laptop, ASUS has rolled out a bunch of discounts on its ExpertBook lineup as part of the ongoing Flipkart GOAT Sale. The company is offering deals across 42 ExpertBook models, including the flagship ExpertBook Ultra and the ExpertBook P1, P3, and P5 series. Alongside instant discounts, buyers can also take advantage of exchange offers, cashback, and No Cost EMI options.

ASUS ExpertBook Deals During Flipkart GOAT Sale

The discounts span multiple price segments, making the lineup suitable for everyone from students and startups to enterprise users. ASUS says some models are available at up to 28.5% off, with prices starting at ₹45,990.

The biggest offers are available on the premium ExpertBook Ultra, where buyers can claim bank discounts of up to ₹20,000, exchange bonuses of up to ₹20,000, and up to 24 months of No Cost EMI. ASUS is also bundling its 5+5+5 service package with the laptop for a limited time.

Meanwhile, selected ExpertBook P-series models are available with discounts of up to ₹34,000 during the sale.

ASUS ExpertBook Ultra Is Built for AI Workloads

ASUS ExpertBook Laptops Get Discounts Up to ₹34,000 During Flipkart GOAT Sale
	
If you’ve been looking to buy a business laptop, ASUS has rolled out a bunch of discounts on its ExpertBook lineup as part of the ongoing Flipkart GOAT Sale. The company is offering deals across 42 ExpertBook models, including the flagship ExpertBook Ultra and the ExpertBook P1, P3, and P5 series. Alongside instant discounts, buyers can also take advantage of exchange offers, cashback, and No Cost EMI options.



ASUS ExpertBook Deals During Flipkart GOAT Sale



The discounts span multiple price segments, making the lineup suitable for everyone from students and startups to enterprise users. ASUS says some models are available at up to 28.5% off, with prices starting at ₹45,990.



The biggest offers are available on the premium ExpertBook Ultra, where buyers can claim bank discounts of up to ₹20,000, exchange bonuses of up to ₹20,000, and up to 24 months of No Cost EMI. ASUS is also bundling its 5+5+5 service package with the laptop for a limited time.



Meanwhile, selected ExpertBook P-series models are available with discounts of up to ₹34,000 during the sale.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra Is Built for AI Workloads







Sitting at the top of the lineup is the ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine. 



It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.



The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.



ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget







While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.



Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.



Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.



Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals



Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:




ASUS ExpertBook P1403CVA – Available from ₹55,990, saving buyers ₹6,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P3406CCAP – Now priced at ₹84,990, down by ₹10,000.



ASUS ExpertBook P5405CAA – Available for ₹1,89,990 with a ₹25,000 discount.



ASUS ExpertBook Ultra – Starts at ₹2,39,990 and qualifies for additional bank discounts, exchange offers, No Cost EMI, and ASUS’ bundled 5+5+5 service package.






#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus

Sitting at the top of the lineup is the ExpertBook Ultra, ASUS’ flagship business laptop aimed at executives, creators, and professionals who need workstation-level performance without carrying around a bulky machine.

It features the latest Intel Core Ultra processor with built-in Copilot+ AI capabilities, allowing users to accelerate AI-powered workloads, meetings, and productivity tasks. ASUS has paired it with a 3K Tandem OLED display for vibrant colors and sharp visuals, while the lightweight magnesium alloy chassis keeps the laptop portable enough for frequent travel.

The laptop also includes enterprise-grade security, fast charging, long battery life, and ASUS’ premium support package, making it the company’s most feature-packed business notebook.

ExpertBook P Series Covers Every Budget

Asus ExpertBook P3 featured image

While the ExpertBook Ultra targets power users, the ExpertBook P series is designed for everyday business computing. The lineup consists of the P1, P3, and P5, giving buyers multiple options depending on their performance needs and budget.

Across the range, ASUS offers the latest Intel Core Ultra processors, multiple display sizes, upgradeable RAM and SSD storage, and AI-powered productivity features. Business users also get enterprise security features, military-grade durability, AI-enhanced video conferencing tools, reliable battery life, international warranty coverage, and on-site service support.

Whether you’re handling spreadsheets, attending video meetings all day, or managing multiple applications simultaneously, the P-series is built to deliver dependable everyday performance while remaining easy to upgrade in the future.

Best ASUS ExpertBook Deals

Some of the best offers currently available during the Flipkart GOAT Sale include:

#ASUS #ExpertBook #Laptops #Discounts #Flipkart #GOAT #SaleAsus

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