AI As Assistant vs AI Slop

There is a massive difference between using AI as a thinking and writing assistant versus generating endless streams of low-effort “AI slop.” I increasingly think people intuitively recognize the distinction immediately. One feels authored, refined, and connected to a real human perspective. The other feels synthetic, generic, emotionally hollow, and mass-produced. The important question is not “Was AI involved?” but rather: “Was a human actually thinking?”
AI As Assistant vs AI Slop

Andrew G. Stanton - Tuesday, May 19, 2026


I am increasingly tired of the dishonest framing around AI-assisted work.

There is a massive difference between:

  • using AI as a thinking/writing assistant and
  • generating endless low-effort content sludge for engagement farming.

Those are not remotely the same thing.

Yet modern discourse increasingly collapses both into the same category: “AI-generated content.”

I think this flattening is intellectually lazy.

And honestly, I suspect many people already know the difference intuitively.

The False Binary

A strange binary has emerged online:

Either:

  • everything must be manually produced without assistance or:
  • anything touched by AI is fake, worthless, or fraudulent.

I reject that framing completely.

Humans have always used tools to extend their capabilities.

That includes:

  • editors
  • spellcheckers
  • research assistants
  • translators
  • photographers
  • calculators
  • IDEs
  • search engines
  • collaborative writing
  • ghostwriters
  • publishing software

This list relates to publishing content, obviously it gets much larger once you start to expand the scope (medicine, science, etc.., food production, transportation etc..)

Nobody says: “You didn’t REALLY write that because you used spellcheck.”

OR “You didn’t REALLY code that because you used an IDE.”

But suddenly AI assistance becomes uniquely disqualifying?

I do not buy it. And I think the irritation is bubbling up now.

AI As Assistant

When I use AI well, it feels much closer to:

  • collaborative refinement
  • synthesis
  • editing
  • brainstorming
  • structural assistance
  • language acceleration

The core ideas, convictions, perspective, judgement and lived experience are all still mine.

What AI often helps with is:

  • speed
  • structure
  • refinement
  • articulation
  • iteration
  • organization

That is very different from: “Push button -> infinite disposable content.”

What AI Slop Actually Looks Like

I think people recognize “AI slop” immediately, even if they cannot always explain why.

Here is an actual example of a completely unedited AI-generated output I archived during an experiment.

The Cryptographic Frontier

The sun had barely crested the horizon when Amara awoke, her eyes fluttering open to the familiar sight of her modest, one-room apartment.

Rubbing the sleep from her eyes, she reached for the weathered smartphone on her nightstand, thumbing it to life.

As the device powered on, a familiar chime rang out - a notification from her Bitcoin wallet.

Amara’s heart raced as she tapped the screen, eager to see what the message contained.

To her delight, the balance had grown overnight, a trickle of sats deposited from the various gig jobs and side hustles she had taken on.

This was her lifeblood, the key to her financial freedom.

Gone were the days of relying on a capricious employer or a volatile local currency.

Bitcoin was her escape, her ticket to a future of self-sovereignty and opportunity.

(and it continues like this for hundreds more words)


Now to be clear:

  • this is not “horrible”
  • the grammar is fine
  • the structure is coherent
  • the prose is technically readable

But it feels emotionally and intellectually generic almost immediately.

Why?

Because everything sounds simulated:

  • simulated conviction
  • simulated humanity etc..

everything feels like a … “simulation”

There is no real tension, lived experience or actual friction.

It feels assembled from patterns.

That is what I mean by AI slop.

And importantly: the problem is not merely that AI was involved.

The problem is that no real human authorship is visible in the final result.

The Real Question Is Not:

“Was AI used?”

The real question is:

“Was a human actually thinking?”

That is the distinction that matters to me.

Did someone:

  • wrestle with ideas?
  • refine a position?
  • challenge assumptions?
  • bring lived experience?
  • exercise judgment?
  • communicate something real?

Or did they simply optimize content production?

Those are radically different things.

Ironically, Many “Authentic” Systems Were Already Fake

What makes the anti-AI purity tests especially strange is that much of the modern internet was already deeply performative before AI arrived.

Many systems were already rewarding:

  • engagement farming
  • outrage optimization
  • social signaling
  • trend mimicry
  • emotional manipulation
  • algorithmic adaptation
  • fake expertise
  • visibility gaming

This has been true for at least the last 15 years.

AI did not invent synthetic behavior. In many ways, it simply exposed how synthetic much online culture already was.

Why I Am Open About AI Assistance

I would rather be transparent.

If AI helped refine or structure an article, I am comfortable saying so.

Not because the ideas are fake, but because pretending no tooling exists now feels increasingly dishonest.

I suspect the future will involve some mixture of:

  • human judgment and authorship

with

  • AI assistance and AI tooling

and using

  • collaborative refinement

The important thing will not be: “Was AI involved at all?”

The important thing will be:

  • authenticity
  • originality
  • judgment
  • integrity
  • lived experience
  • clear authorship provenance

AI cannot replace those things.

I honestly don’t think it will EVER replace these things and they will in fact become MORE important as time goes on.

Final Thought

I think many people instinctively know the difference between:

  • thoughtful AI-assisted work and
  • industrialized AI slop

even if they cannot articulate it clearly yet.

One feels like a human using a powerful tool.

The other feels like a content factory trying to simulate humans.

Those are not the same thing.

And I am increasingly tired of pretending otherwise.



Write a comment
No comments yet.