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AI Slop: Social Media Armageddon – Not Good

Having been in the world of computer science, I have noticed that the term “AI” (Artificial Intelligence) has morphed as a concept. In my earlier days it was simply attempting to get computers to “reason” or “think” about things and possibly automate a lot of moribund tasks. AI now seems to be a catchphrase for a plethora of weird and wonderful concepts.

Examples of AI Slop:

The Danger of AI Slop in Social Media:

The proliferation of AI Slop undermines information integrity and public trust in digital communication. On platforms where engagement rewards visibility, AI-generated junk content often outcompetes legitimate sources due to its sheer volume and emotional manipulation tactics. This crowds out meaningful human voices and nuanced discourse. According to The Atlantic, the internet is facing a potential collapse under the weight of this “garbage flood,” as algorithmic incentives prioritize quantity over quality.

Social media’s hard push algorithms make it particularly vulnerable to this type of content. In a 2024 MIT Technology Review, researchers highlighted how AI Slop erodes users’ ability to distinguish between genuine and manipulated content. This degrades public discourse and facilitates the spread of misinformation, especially in politically sensitive or crisis-related situations. Worse, AI Slop can be repurposed by malicious actors to amplify propaganda or disinformation campaigns at scale, making it a national security concern as well as a cultural one.

AI Slop Junkyard?

Shortcomings of AI

AI, like all programming and writing, has biases. Whoever programmed it will infuse their biases no matter how hard anyone tries. You can tell my bias easily in this article. What do I mean by AI biases?

AI Slop as envisioned by ChatGPT #AI #Slop #ChatGPT

AI Slop For Profit?

This continues to be a theme out there which is really starting to get under my skin. As you can tell I am writing this, with some help for spelling and grammar. The new trend I am seeing is using AI to “write” stuff and then passing it off as your own to make money. We had a term in the past about this, it was plagiarism. AI is not “writing” anything, it is simply finding work on the topic, possibly rewriting it a little, but it is nothing new.

If I copied an article from Wired, and then put my own ads into it, I am sure I might get a call from Wired’s lawyers. Some might argue Wired is already using AI to write, but that is for someone else to argue.

The worst “make money fast” scheme I have seen, is the following scenario.

You haven’t created something of value, you are simply scheming to make a quick buck. Luckily the theme of the book is that, so you will be hitting your target audience.



AI Slop Profit Conclusions

I have no doubt AI is already far too ingrained in our systems to be able to remove it, but it needs to be closely monitored. Can “SkyNet” happen? Maybe, but this “get rich quick” twattle is really a slap in the face of real content creators. I don’t count myself in this group, but there are folk who really write the English language well, and they are the victims of the “AI Plagiarism” game. The same is true for skilled programmers (and there aren’t that many out there).

I am confident that the AI at the search engines will push this little tidbit into oblivion, but it might be funny if it ever appears in an “AI plagiarised” article later on.

What is AI Slop?

Content partially or completely created by AI clients like ChatGPT and posted for informational purposes. Typically used to create income without having to do any work for “content authors”. Usually sad and hack-ish content that are rehashes of existing information, or worse misinformation.

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