Comment by hobom
5 days ago
The article didn't suggest that the video mentioned was AI slop, it correctly recognised it as human generated.
5 days ago
The article didn't suggest that the video mentioned was AI slop, it correctly recognised it as human generated.
I know he said it was not AI, but he but still described it as “slop”, lumping it in with the other examples. And said it was a video “where a woman decides to intentionally start a fight with her boyfriend” which isn’t really an accurate description. She’s a well known comedian playing an obviously exaggerated character that pokes fun at relationship dynamics.
My point here isn’t simply that “people can’t differentiate between AI and not AI” (although that is an issue for some) but that the prevalence of AI slop lowers the trust of ALL content even when they know it isn’t AI generated. This author was so fed up with the content they were being served that they were quick to dismiss other content along with it at a cursory glance.
Indeed. He thought it was not AI slop, but the kind of low-effort slop ruining Facebook.
Your opinions may vary, but this is not one of those super clickbaity social media personalities; people like her because she's funny.