TechBeware, "AI Slop" Summer Is HereWhat's going on: The internet and chronically online aren’t ready, and it shows… A video of a service kangaroo getting turned away from a flight recently went viral, racking up over a million likes. Viewers melted over the creature’s apparent sweetness — until they realized the whole thing was AI-generated. Videos like that could just be the beginning. Fast Company reports that feeds might soon be filled (if they’re not already) with “AI slop” — low-quality, AI-generated content — cranked out to rack up views on platforms like YouTube and TikTok. Some of it’s political, much of it’s misleading, and it tends to spread further through messaging apps like WhatsApp. What it means: AI-generated content is no longer fringe — it’s creeping into search results, product listings, user reviews, and even published books. And as the tools get sharper, spotting the fakes becomes harder. Even digital natives are falling for it. Some companies, like Google, are trying to help by adding AI watermarks, but experts say that’s just a Band-Aid. With social platforms incentivizing engagement over accuracy, and regulation lagging behind, we may be headed for what Fast Company calls a “zero-trust internet” — where everything looks a little suspicious because anything could be fake. Related: Anthropic’s CEO Issues a Stark AI Warning: “In 10 Years, All Bets Are Off” (The Hill) |