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In the latest update on AI slop, Ars Technica, a once reputable publication of over 25 years, has accidentally published a fake AI written article, complete with fake quotes. Unlike the fake story shared by Nate Silver earlier, which was published on a grifter's glorified blog, and somehow syndicated into Yahoo news, this story was actually published by a "real" media company under its own label. To be fair, the ars article bears few of the obvious hallmarks of AI writing, and it also gets a passing score by most AI detectors. I suspect the authors may have lazily asked AI to create a point by point skeleton for the article, then humanly written the words themselves that appeared on the page (excluding the hallucinated fake quotes of course). Fortunately, the article was taken down quickly, but the editors have so far refused to disclaim the use of AI, amd instead are hiding behind the misquotes as a reason to take the article down. It remains to be seen whether or not the use of AI slop was actually a rouge writer violating the policy, or someone using AI as directed by management but just skimping on the checking its answers part.
In other news, Malewarebytes has joined the ranks of Cloudflare and Lenovo as multi-billion dollar multinationational corporations that decided it's necessary to each publish a library of absolutely worthless AI slop, masquerading without disclosure as legitimate content. These zero effort AI takes are ... well ... zero effort, and provide zero added value to society by being published. I have no idea if Malewarebytes is a good company, but it's certainly a real company, with offices around the globe and enterprise contracts with many fortune 500 companies. These are all companies with sales and marketing teams in the dozens or hundreds of people, and likely multiple layers of approval to do anything new, yet they decided that zero effort AI slop takes are perfectly in line with their brand and reputation. There's clearly some kind of incentives (likely mostly SEO) for real companies to publish loads and loads of fake content on their websites, tangentially or not at all related to their actual business, which is extremely unfortunate because it's a waste of time for anyone who happens across this fake content, and even a waste of time for the slopmeister who has to click the button to generate 10 million words of fake content.
I'm going to piggy back on this with two things I've seen in the last week.
The first is highly personal. My employer does annual security training, with a focus around phishing attacks. The training this year used AI-generated video that was really off-putting. The actors were "realistic", but there was an uncanny wax-like quality to their skin, and their movements weren't quite correct for human baseline. Almost everyone on my team noticed it, and it casually came up in a meeting where my boss's boss was attending. The first words out of his mouth after that was "wait, there was AI?". We all sat there silently for a few seconds. It was clear that he absolutely did not perceive that the content was AI-generated. Despite the odd, inhuman quality, he didn't even peg it as animated. It made me wonder if there's some fundamental disconnect between my brain and the brains of upper management that makes the technology entirely different for them. As a model-train American, I can't discount it, but goddamn was it weird to see in action.
The second is Something Big Is Happening, the viral post that has been storming through the pro and anti AI ranks for a few days now.
The piece itself is a tour de force demonstration of how to stoke fear and uncertainty. It essentially outlines a maximal view of the AI Jobpocalypse that many fear, written with the flat certainty of a native LinkedIn citizen.
Clearly, the only solution to being obsoleted by AI is to use as much AI as possible in the meantime, as curated by the author.
This is interesting to me for a couple of reasons. For one, it's gone pretty viral - 80 million views is a lot, and I don't know if this guy caught th zeitgeist in the way he intended. It seems like he was trying to stoke fear, but especially among my younger acquaintances, it seems like more than anything he's managed to stoke anger - a "wood and nails are cheap, AI can't build crucifixes and you don't have functioning murder drones yet" kind of way.
The second reason that it caught my attention is because the name tickled something in the back of my mind, and I didn't want to post about it until I could figure out what it was. I found the answer this morning.
I thought that name looked familiar
I'm pretty conflicted on all of this. It sure seems like the technology has real potential and real applications, but by God does it feel like every single person involved is a sociopathic narcissist who gets off on conning the rubes.
I was unaware of this article.
My attitude towards AI tools for the last 18 months had been "yeah they're useful but if you try to get too ambitious with them they waste more time than they save" and I was like AI 2027? Ha, try AI 2035.
But something fundamentally changed with the models in the last month. I'm low key freaking out at how goddamn useful they are now through Claude Code and OpenAI Codex.
Forget METR evals. My personal real world evals are that they're 6/6 on doing 2-4 week long tasks in 1-2 hours.
For what it's worth, working in a non-technical, non-coding-related field (), my experience has been that some higher-ups are interested in the idea of AI and occasionally push a half-baked idea, which lower-level employees dutifully try for about two hours, conclude that it's useless, and then keep on doing things the old-fashioned way. I have yet to find any actual use-case for AI and continue to see it as a solution in search of a problem.
Maybe it's useful in some very specific, very narrow fields. Maybe coding is one of them. I'm not a coder so I don't know. But what my professional experience thus far tells me is that LLMs are good for producing large amounts of grammatically correct but turgid and unreadable bilge, and pretty much nothing else. If what you want is to mass-produce mediocre writing, well, that's what AI can do for you. If you want pretty much anything else, you're out of luck.
In a sense I think it's the ultimate 'wordcel' technology. It does symbol manipulation. It's good at translating one language into another, and apparently that it includes translating natural language instructions into computer code. But I remain skeptical as to its utility for much beyond that. It might be nice one day for someone to sit down and run through an explanation of how the heck this is supposed to get from language production and manipulation to, well, anything else.
Calling LLMs “wordcel technology” is backwards in 2026.
You can paste in a screenshot of a math problem that 99%+ of adults would fail, calculus, linear algebra, probability, geometry and it will solve it step by step, showing its work.
Not just arithmetic. Structured reasoning over formal systems. The same goes for logic puzzles, physics derivations, statistics problems.
They'll even teach it to you.
If your definition of wordcel now includes ‘solves multistep math from an image and explains it', then we're just not going to agree on the term.
I disagree, LLMs remain pretty terrible at any task requiring strict precision, accuracy, and rigor. And from what I understand of the underlying mechanisms this is unlikely to be resolved anytime soon.
Imagine the full range of legal opinions that exist on the internet, intelligent, retarded, and everything in between. Now imagine what the average of that mass of opinions would look like. That's effectively what you're getting when you ask an LLM for legal advice. Now for some traditionally wordcel-oriented tasks like "summarize this text" or "write an essay about ____" this is more than adequate, perhaps even excellent. But for an application requiring a clear and correct answer that isn't necessarily the average/default (IE the kind of things a "shape-rotator" might be hired to calculate), they are worse than useless because they give you something that looks plausible but may very well be completely wrong, and as such you will still have to take the time to work out the correct answer yourself if only just to verify it.
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