Before today, I could not explain to you why AI articles were so obvious to me, but I think I do now. There is no insight to be gleamed. Pre-LLM, authors generally had intention behind their words. The final product might not adequately reflect their thoughts, but word selection would expose it somewhat. With LLMs, sentences flow seamlessly from word to word, but the intention is nowhere to be found. Things happened and more things happened, to what end?
LLMs seem to emulate bad (or even "meh") writing well but, without a human editor making significant tweaks, have yet to excel at good writing.
I've been incorrectly identified as an LLM before now because my writing is sometimes bad and falls into the tropes now associated with generative AI (“not this, but that”, being overly wordy, appearing to lack focus, etc).
Frankly, much less so. People were more likely to just write nothing at all. The "things are drowning in slop" complaint is about very real change.
At a quick glance, it looks like a thing that should contain meaning and substance. At any closer inspection, it falls apart completely.
AI-generated articles are the intellectual equivalent of empty calories.
I have just spent the last 10 minutes trying to figure out why someone decided to buy imgui.org, name-squatting an actual project, just to put a slop website on it mildly referencing the original project. It's not even trying to scam you.
I keep wondering whether these people that keep polluting the internet with their insightless slop even possess self-awareness. What motivates them to expend money and effort to contribute nothing to the world? Are they another example of a philosophical zombie?
What need does filling the Internet with AI-generated slop serve? No one is ever going to read those. As I've shown, sometimes they're not even selling anything.
The multi-trillion dollar business is for hyperscalers, but I don't get what slop creators get out of this. What are they spending money for?
One of the most globally recognized attribute of the recent US-Iranian war was the Lego cartoons. This sort of content will be soon churned out by everyone.
To prepare for the future use of these resources.
"But then X happened... Wait, didn't Y happen? Then why would X be there? I think the user's initial statement was correct, but then Y happened..."
It's a thing
I don't know why
But it's a thing
To be honest, it's not a thing.Let that sink in.
Maybe we find most meaning in the least average language constructs.
I suppose we humans are so good at reading between the lines, that we will see meaning where there is none.
Maybe this is just an inherent problem with LLMs.
- either the problem is hard, or labs have no incentive to fix it for their main users
- being able to tell that something is LLM-generated, is good
- could be that structure is an emergent property as models get better
I think this is at least in part a combination of rosy retrospection and attentional bias: A lot of human writing was always trash. Absolute dogshit with regard to the quality of writing, but there was no "AI slop" label to attach to it. How would you, pre-LLMs, have placed a comment on the writing style if a post was badly written? From what I've seen it would be a "this is marketing/SEO-speak" or some similar comment, deriding the author for being uninformed or of ill intent.
We've now become so allergic to AI slop that anything that even smells like it triggers almost immediate disgust and attachment of that label to the content (even if it is the same old human written trash).
I guess LLM-assisted posts do change the dynamic a bit: the intent is more often benign with a desire to write something good, but the skill to do so lacking. If we limit the "pre-LLM authors" to people with good intent writing about stuff relevant to a HackerNews audience, you're probably right. Many more bad writers are now creating the same ostensibly fancy articles, decreasing the signal-to-noise ratio we were used.
Yes, several history authors come to mind who over several decades never broke out of the style of "this happened, then they moved to here, then this happened.". Their entire book could just be summarised in a table instead of prose.
LLMs seem to be stuck at the same stage, telling us 'what' but not 'why' and 'so what.'
This text reads great for me because as I read it, I clearly saw there's no agenda so I felt safe to just absorb the information that it contains.
Maybe AI is sort of anti-trump, where it's viscerally unbearable for native speakers even if the content is good, opposite to trump speech that somehow seems viscerally appealing to native speakers even though the content is complete garbage.
This is no surprise. AI slop is called slop for a reason. It is basically just spam-slop. The whole term "Artificial Intelligence" has always been a misnomer from the get go, stealing from biological systems without understanding them, yet alone being able to re-create them via non-biological means. Even synthetic biology, as cool as it is, has huge limitations e. g. leaky promoters (or CRISPR-Cas off-target cleavage, which is a major reason why gene therapy isn't yet there, despite the occasional promo article of how xyz has been totally cured forever).
What I don't understand is that people can find it useful. I understand some of the rationale, but I find AI slop just aims to try to steal my time. I can not tolerate this.
(bigheading)The takeaway(/bigheading) The style? Terrible.
The "But France was running two clocks at once" paragraph really set me off because I get the feeling something really interesting might be happening that the AI doesn't want to talk about and there is evidence that it is trying to say something. But the result is some amount of gibberish and some amount of vague allusion to something interesting in the prompt context while glossing over all the information that might matter while working hard to create an evocative feeling that isn't interesting. A tense atmosphere with no exploration of why there is tension.
Matters of perspective.
It didn’t undermine it for me.
Stuff like this just makes the author seem clueless. What is even the function of putting a question like that into an LLM unless you’re already hopelessly in anthropomorphic territory
Oh no - we're going to end up with the Starmerbot 3000.
Now I've got the joke out of the way, there's at least four interesting lines of inquiry one could take with this blog post:
- teaching the AI how to play Civilization
- to what extent does this result in "transferable skills", either AI or human? Is this the right game (qv SimCity etc)?
- issues of visibility; "seeing like a state" becomes very literal here. The AI can only make decisions on things it knows about. What are the limits of that when trying to do politics only from statistical information? Should we be referencing Stafford Beer here?
- (at the risk of tripping your AI detector here): modern politics is not so much left vs right as "technocratic wonk" vs "blood and soil". The wonks have comprehensively lost in public opinion. Creating a better wonk is not going to help until there is demand for that kind of politics.
If there ever is a US-China war, it will not be in search of more victory points to meet a win condition, it will be like the Russia-Ukraine war: one guy (on either side!) decides to make hundreds of millions of people worse off out of sheer greed.
If anything, I'd almost prefer a leader who hasn't played Civilization in their life. Goes without saying that a mature leader could tell these apart, but in this day and age, I'm not so sure whether everyone could.
This is not a binary; it's the same people on the same side.
That doesn't mean that rational policy planning has never been a thing. The EU while imperfect and frustrating is explicitly orientated towards technocratic consensus rather than the mid-20th-century Europe of nationalist mass murder. Only a tiny number of people think that Von der Leyen and Hitler are equivalent.
(or rather, if you think technocrats and blood-and-soil are the same side, what do you call the "other" side?)
I don't disagree that there are different approaches in conflict, but the binary of forward-looking technologists vs backward-looking nationalists is very out-of-date.
I think you greatly low-ball how complex situation is there
Making war crimes palatable?
Tony Blair is the guy who found success by making the UK's left-leaning party (much) more neoliberal and was promptly imitated by Gerhard Schröder in Germany doing basically the same thing. Schröder is also BFF with Putin.
Yeah because LLM "experiences" the game
Yet the benchmark is Civilization VI, which consists of extremely coarse, human written rules with the explicit goal of keeping players busy. Basically, a waste of time, money, water, and CO2.
Of course it did, its designer worked for Tony Blair institute.