News: 0175353671

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

AI Slop Is Flooding Medium (wired.com)

(Tuesday October 29, 2024 @06:40PM (msmash) from the madness-is-spreading dept.)


AI slop is flowing onto every major platform where people post online -- and Medium [1]is no exception . Wired:

> The 12-year-old publishing platform has undertaken a dizzying number of pivots over the years. It's finally on a financial upswing, having turned a monthly profit for the first time this summer. Medium CEO Tony Stubblebine and other executives at the company have described the platform as "a home for human writing." But there is evidence that robot bloggers are increasingly flocking to the platform, too.

>

> Earlier this year, WIRED asked AI detection startup Pangram Labs to analyze Medium. It took a sampling of 274,466 recent posts over a six-week period and estimated that over 47 percent were likely AI-generated. "This is a couple orders of magnitude more than what I see on the rest of the internet," says Pangram CEO Max Spero. (The company's analysis of one day of global news sites this summer found 7 percent as likely AI-generated.)

>

> The strain of slop on Medium tends toward the banal, especially compared with the dadaist flotsam clogging Facebook. Instead of Shrimp Jesus, one is more apt to see vacant dispatches about cryptocurrency. The tags with the most likely AI-generated content included "NFT" -- out of 5,712 articles tagged with this phrase over the last several months, Pangram found that 4,492, or around 78 percent, came back as likely AI-generated -- as well as "web3," "ethereum," "AI," and, for whatever reason, "pets."



[1] https://www.wired.com/story/ai-generated-medium-posts-content-moderation/



It takes good jobs (Score:5, Funny)

by i kan reed ( 749298 )

From us folks who specialize in filling the internet with insipid meaningless posts.

Re: (Score:2)

by Pseudonymous Powers ( 4097097 )

I think that the recent proliferation of AI slop (Web 3.0?) is just Nature's way of showing us that Web 2.0 was a mistake.

Re:It takes good jobs[, not LinkedIn jobs] (Score:3)

by shanen ( 462549 )

Someone is paying you to post on Slashdot? Sign me up!

Not a bad FP, but I did want to bring LinkedIn into the discussion. It's that annoying request to use AI to help write comments there. "Start a post, try writing with AI" is already an awful idea, though I'd forgive it if EVERY post written that way had an appropriate annotation--but I've never seen one. So either no one on LinkedIn is using the option and LinkedIn is still flogging it pointlessly after some months, or the people who are using it are hid

Re: (Score:3)

by i kan reed ( 749298 )

I'm currently paid $0, but with AI I might have to take a pay cut.

Re: (Score:1)

by shanen ( 462549 )

I forgot to include "Mod parent Funny".

Re: (Score:3)

by PackMan97 ( 244419 )

Right! I was thinking as opposed to the human generated slop that filled Medium before?

Re: (Score:2)

by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 )

Buzzfeed has entered the discussion

Re: (Score:2)

by Big Hairy Gorilla ( 9839972 )

Well played, Sir.

Quantity has a quality all its own (Score:1)

by OrangeTide ( 124937 )

As AI improves and gets cheaper, it is going to revolutionize the Internet. Instead of having thousands of people putting together low quality click bait and chumbuckets. We will be able to produce useless trash that is personalized to a site or even to an individual user. Potentially getting people to accidentally click on our deceptive and misleading content. A new golden era where there is more noise than signal is bound to follow.

Re: (Score:1)

by OrangeTide ( 124937 )

I mean [1]chumbox [wikipedia.org] not chumbucket.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chumbox

Re: (Score:2)

by rickb928 ( 945187 )

Wait, Medium has more than three unique posts a year now? It's sure changed.

Huh, it's progress.

Obligatory "and nothing of value was lost" (Score:4, Insightful)

by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

Medium has always been a cesspool content mill site. The fact that some of the effluent is now being machine-generated doesn't change much. Heck, I remember back in the day when Slashdot used to regularly post content from Medium when story tags were still a thing, and they'd always get tagged "OhNoItsMedium".

I see both sides (Score:2)

by MpVpRb ( 1423381 )

On one side, work like Alpha Fold is truly exciting

On the other side, it seems like AI companies are pushing crap generators. They serve no useful purpose, they just produce vast quantities of crap

Natural selection (Score:5, Interesting)

by peterww ( 6558522 )

Good! The enshittification of technology will destroy the bullshit blogs that have driven how people think for the past decade. People will now have to learn how to think for themselves, or seek real knowledge outside of clickbait drivel and astroturfing.

We spent so much time afraid of AI, we never thought how it might accidentally help us. Its garbage hallucinations force us to verify facts. Its garbage spam forces us to seek higher quality sources of vetted information. Its automation forces us to put in quality checks that were missing (but needed) for human processes.

It's tech shittiness that will save us.

Re: (Score:2)

by Rujiel ( 1632063 )

Blogs? For ten years? Are you posting from 2014?

Re: (Score:2)

by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

> The enshittification of technology will destroy the bullshit blogs that have driven how people think for the past decade.

Except it isn't. People remain hooked on bullshit even when it is AI generated. Look right their in TFS: Medium just turned its first ever profit. Facebook has been filled with AI generated non-content for ages. People are tiktoking the worst most worthless content in existence (e.g. rage bait cooking), they are literally eating this worthless shit "content" up (pun intended) and there's no sign that AI generated garbage is any more of a turnoff than anything else.

Re: (Score:2)

by nightflameauto ( 6607976 )

> Good! The enshittification of technology will destroy the bullshit blogs that have driven how people think for the past decade. People will now have to learn how to think for themselves, or seek real knowledge outside of clickbait drivel and astroturfing.

You have more faith in people than I do. People are used to not thinking. Blindly following whatever they read online is a way of life for some. I don't see that changing just because it gets ever so slightly dumber.

> We spent so much time afraid of AI, we never thought how it might accidentally help us. Its garbage hallucinations force us to verify facts. Its garbage spam forces us to seek higher quality sources of vetted information. Its automation forces us to put in quality checks that were missing (but needed) for human processes.

I wish all this were true. We already have problems finding the common ground we call reality with some folks. This level of crapflooding is only going to make that worse, as more and more give in to the illusory "but I read it on the internet!" version of reality, essentially creating their own

Well,... (Score:2)

by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 )

...you know, the interwebs pipes have always been more about quantity than quality. You reap what you sow.

AI effect (Score:2)

by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 )

AI will die as it floods the same sources it scrapes causing it to feed upon itself like a photocopy of a photocopy until it is a mess of gibberish.

Know what an order of magnitude means... (Score:2)

by monkeyzoo ( 3985097 )

An order of magnitude is a power of 10.

47 is exactly ONE order of magnitude more than 7, NOT "a couple of orders of magnitude more."

Re: (Score:2)

by rossdee ( 243626 )

"An order of magnitude is a power of 10."

There are 10 sorts of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

Re: (Score:2)

by NotEmmanuelGoldstein ( 6423622 )

> ... is a power of 10.

Magnitude means the number is multiplied by adding a 0 to the right-end of it. Depending on the numbering system, that can mean multiply by 10, or multiply by 2. We don't have to use a different numbering system. We can use ordinary (decimal) numbers with the condition that 25 is one magnitude larger than 5 (implying base-5 numbering). Such a condition has not been stipulated in the summary, making your complaint, valid.

Nothing! (Score:2)

by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 )

Those chans you hang out on, AI is just replacing what's been done by humans for a while: posting stupid crap that angers you and makes you click, so they get ad "peeps", or views. And back-and-forth convos no longer need be pregenerated stuff in an array, but can be on the fly with AI by having it respond to itself.

You're arguing...with nothing.

I assume AI will replace similar thread creation here.

We should all just kick back and let AI do everything and collect a dribble check.

I dislike Medium (Score:2)

by TJHook3r ( 4699685 )

I hate Medium in the same way I hate Pinterest - I do a search on Google and a Medium article comes up and there are enough alternative domain names to disguise the fact it's Medium. When I click it, it's either paywalled or it counts as x of 3 free articles. Yes, good journalism should pay but often I'm looking for a tech article and realise pretty quickly it's the wrong article or a lazy shallow article - except Medium is paywalled so I may not get that far

Microsoft Open Source Solitaire

REDMOND, WA -- In a first attempt at "embrace-and-extend" of open source
software, Microsoft will release its popular Solitaire and FreeCell games as
open source under the MILA (Microsoft Innovative License Agreement).
According to a Microsoft press release, the Visual C++ source code for the
two games will be available from the Microsoft website "in the first quarter"
(no year was specified).

Industry pundits hail the move as revolutionary. "Microsoft's release of its
most popular Windows feature as open source software demonstrates just how
innovative the company really is. The DoJ is clearly barking up the wrong
tree," wrote one Ziff-Davis flunkie. One executive at a large company said,
"Freely available source code is the best idea Microsoft has ever invented."

One Linux developer told Humorix, "Let's just hope some fool doesn't try to
port this thing to Linux. Imagine the havoc that could ensue if a bunch of
core Linux contributors downloaded Solitaire and became addicted to it. It
would be a disaster! Linux and open source development would grind to a halt
while the hackers wasted their time playing Solitaire or FreeCell. 'Just one
more game...' they would say."