AI slop is suffocating the web, says a new study

The generative AI revolution shows no sign of slowing as OpenAI recently rolled out its GPT-4.5 model to paying ChatGPT users, while competitors have announced plans to introduce their own latest models—including Anthropic, which unveiled Claude 3.7 Sonnet, its latest language model, late last month. But the ease of use of these AI models is having a material impact on the information we encounter daily, according to a new study published in Cornell University’s preprint server arXiv.

An analysis of more than 300 million documents, including consumer complaints, corporate press releases, job postings, and messages for the media published by the United Nations suggests that the web is being swamped with AI-generated slop.

The study tracks the purported involvement of generative AI tools to create content across those key sectors, above, between January 2022 and September 2024. “We wanted to quantify how many people are using these tools,” says Yaohui Zhang, one of the study’s coauthors, and a researcher at Stanford University.

The answer was, a lot. Following the November 30, 2022, release of ChatGPT, the estimated proportion of content in each domain that saw suggestions of AI generation or involvement skyrocketed. From a baseline of around 1.5% in the 11 months prior to the release of ChatGPT, the proportion of customer complaints that exhibited some sort of AI help increased tenfold. Similarly, the share of press releases that had hints of AI involvement rapidly increased in the months after ChatGPT became widely available.

Which areas of the United States were more likely to adopt AI to help write complaints was made possible by the data accompanying the text of each complaint made to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the government agency that Donald Trump has now dissolved. In the 2024 data analyzed by the academics, complainants in Arkansas, Missouri, and North Dakota were the most likely to use AI, with its presence in around one in four complaints; while West Virginia, Idaho, and Vermont residents were least likely—where between one in 20 and one in 40 showed AI evidence.

Unlike off-the-shelf AI detection tools, Zhang and his colleagues developed their own statistical framework to determine whether something was likely AI-generated that compared linguistic patterns—including word frequency distributions—in texts written before the release of ChatGPT against those known to have been generated or modified by large language models. The outputs were then tested against known human- or AI-written texts, with prediction errors lower than 3.3%, suggesting it was able to accurately discern one from the other. Like many, the team behind the work is worried about the impact of samizdat content flooding the web—particularly in so many areas, from consumer complaints to corporate and non-governmental organization press releases. “I think [generative AI] is somehow constraining the creativity of humans,” says Zhang.


https://www.fastcompany.com/91293162/ai-slop-is-suffocating-the-web?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 1mo | 10.03.2025, 11:10:08


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

Joe Rogan and Dave Portnoy are already distancing themselves from Trump’s agenda

Just a few months into Donald Trump’s second term, are the manosphere influencers who championed him already starting to backpedal?

In a

23.04.2025, 05:30:06 | Fast company - tech
‘Perfect example of what a snipe should be’: The Dr Pepper guy is stream sniping IRL—and the internet can’t get enough

Stalking, but with a side of Dr Pepper?

A number of streamers in Japan have recently had run-ins with a mysterious stream sniper known only as the Dr Pepper Guy. As

22.04.2025, 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Drone near misses hit record high at major airports. Here’s what to know

A commercial airliner was on final approach to San Francisco’s international airport in November when the crew spotted a drone outside the cockpit window. By then it was too late “to take evasive

22.04.2025, 17:50:09 | Fast company - tech
Set your meetings free with these no-cost Zoom alternatives

While Zoom is unquestionably the biggest name in videoconferencing, its free tier has some limitations—particularly the 40-minute time cap on group meetings. The good news is that several excellen

22.04.2025, 15:40:08 | Fast company - tech
Luxury yacht owners are throwing scientists a lifeline

Francesco Ferretti had a problem. His research expedition to track white sharks in the Mediterranean was suddenly adrift—the boat he’d arranged had vanished into the pandemic’s chaos o

22.04.2025, 15:40:06 | Fast company - tech
Tesla investors want to know: when will Musk ditch the White House to boost car sales?

Tesla investors are anxious to know if plans to roll out a cheaper car and a ro

22.04.2025, 15:40:05 | Fast company - tech