Home » MotorTrend Is Touting AI While ‘Slop’ From Other Sites Is Killing Car Journalism

MotorTrend Is Touting AI While ‘Slop’ From Other Sites Is Killing Car Journalism

Mt Ai Top
ADVERTISEMENT

A high-up employee at one of The Autopian’s competitors recently told me about something bothering them: Their site publishes so many crap articles every month that they now have to spend significant portions of their days replying to car company PR reps complaining about all the misinformation being “written” by outside contributors paid pennies to churn out slop. This is the poisoned well of the internet that we’re all being forced to drink from, and it’s killing us all. Let’s talk about this, and also about a recent MotorTrend article admitting to the use of AI.

As the publisher of this site, I have to contend with the fact that, for all the work we do to be model citizens of the web (we don’t review products we don’t use, we try to pay a living wage, we don’t overwhelm the site with ads, we don’t use AI to write stories), we’re up against sites that pump slop into the ecosystem and surround that slop with as many ads as they can.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

While not all of this slop is written by AI, my suspicion is that the writers of this crap often use artificial intelligence to create their articles. There was a recent Reddit thread accusing Jalopnik of using AI, and I replied in the piece that there’s no way the actual journalists there are behind this trend (we know many of the journalists; we think they’re great).

What seems to be happening in various parts of the industry is that individuals outside the normal editorial channels are being given the right to publish by the revenue side of the business, and these low-paid writers (often from abroad) are using AI to complete their articles.

One recent example from Jalopnik is “Here’s What Costco Customers Really Think About Its Wheels,” an article written by UmmeAimon Shabbir, a Pakistani writer whose LinkedIn profile describes her job as “creating engaging content for Google’s Spotlight.”

ADVERTISEMENT

It’s a strange article that doesn’t seem to demonstrate any real awareness of how buying tires from Costco really works. The top comment asks: “Anybody remember when Jalopnik articles weren’t AI-generated slop?” Another example, from the same writer, describes how Colin Chapman created a car “with two chassis stacked together.” There’s no sourcing for any of the article, so it’s possible it’s based on this article by Huibert Mees, the suspension designer who actually looked at the cars in person in order to write about them.

The apparent slop isn’t isolated to Jalopnik. You might say the internet is in its “slop era.” Some of it’s AI; some of it’s human-made, designed to game the algorithm of the day. It’s hard to tell, and genuinely, that’s the problem. Take, for example, Motor1, which features Google-baiting articles like this one: “‘They Lying! That’s a Tactic:’ Woman Pays Car Note for Brand-New Kia Twice a Month. Then She Gets a Letter 5 Years Later” that are being called “ownership stories.”

Autoblog seems to have some of this, plus a lot of commerce pieces built around trying to sell you tools they don’t seem to have personally tested.

All of this falls under the banner of “slop.” These are articles either being written by a computer or very specifically for a computer (in this case, the one that decides which stories you see or don’t see), or both. It’s not about journalism or quality; it’s about cheaply producing enough content to make money. It’s a sign of how challenging this industry has become.

The only thing I can say positively about the sites doing this work is that they’re smart enough to try to hide it. These aren’t efforts championed by journalists; at best, these are desperate attempts at revenue designed to keep journalists employed.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ed Loh, the Editor-in-Chief of MotorTrend, seems to be taking a different approach. He’s openly admitting to using AI in a recent post about his EV-focused podcast with Jonny Lieberman.

The podcast went on hiatus for a while but is back, and one of the big changes, he notes, is that the company is now a part of Hearst Magazines, which also publishes Car And Driver and Road & Track, as well as owns BringATrailer.

The other change?

Another big change is that we’re openly embracing artificial intelligence (AI). The InEVitable is, after all, a vodcast about the future of mobility, and as you no doubt have heard, ad nauseum, THE FUTURE IS AI. So, we decided to put that to the test in the most meta way possible, by actively using commonly available AI tools in the production of The InEVitable. Jonny and I remain your 100 percent human (I think) hosts, interviewing mostly human guests, so be not afraid. The main point of the podcast (the guests, our conversation and insights) are still human, it’s the supporting elements that will be AI-assisted.

For instance, parts of this article were written with the assistance of Hearst Magazine’s ChatGPT. We created the social media clip via an agentic AI video editor called OpusClip. The summary of this article used by Apple News was created via an AI tool in our content management system. We plan on using additional AI tools to assist with future episode descriptions, thumbnail image creation, and audio clean up. Why? For all the reasons AI tools are being touted—speed, efficiency, and experimentation.

What Loh doesn’t mention here is that his company’s new owner, Hearst Magazines, is part of a company that just sold the rights to its works to OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT.

Here’s a Hearst press release on the topic:

ADVERTISEMENT

“Our partnership with OpenAI will help us evolve the future of magazine content,” said Hearst Magazines President Debi Chirichella. “This collaboration ensures that our high-quality writing and expertise, cultural and historical context and attribution and credibility are promoted as OpenAI’s products evolve.”

In exchange for money, Hearst seems to be agreeing to hand over all of its content to OpenAI (the creator of ChatGPT). This is the “suing for peace” version of dealing with AI, and I’m sympathetic to it. Maybe that’s what we’ll have no choice but to do, because some of these companies are  training their models on our content already, and we’re not getting anything out of it.

The amounts Hearst got weren’t disclosed, but it’s assumed by Axios that Hearst is being “compensated millions” for partnering with OpenAI. This is all to say that this is the first time I’m seeing this from a Hearst Autos site, but I doubt it’ll be the last.

This seems bad. I’m not anti-AI, and in fact use AI tools in my own life (Perplexity and Gemini, in particular). When AI is used to take some of the toil out of creating art, that doesn’t bother me, but Loh conflating the creation of graphics and the writing of content with “audio clean up” seems disingenuous to me.

In fact, if you get to the bottom of the post, you’ll see it’s not just the above:

Editor’s Note: This article was written with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI). Future articles in this series will also be AI-assisted.

Loh doesn’t outright say the article was written by AI, just that it was “assisted,” so we don’t know the degree to which robots are writing what you and I are reading. Perhaps we should applaud the transparency here: at least Loh is admitting to using it (though without the context of the OpenAI partnership). However, if we take what Loh is saying at face value, it does seem like he’s at the very least not using AI begrudgingly.

ADVERTISEMENT

This makes sense given that in a previous piece on Motor Trend, he said:

 “They don’t care who generated the illustration…They love it or they hate it. AI doesn’t come up. I think eventually, writing is going to get that way. [Readers] just want a cool story told, they don’t really care how.”

There’s more to the story, and to his credit, Loh mentions ethical concerns and says he does think humans will remain important, but that quote above bugs me because I don’t feel that way about what we write here at all. You readers really, really do care about who is writing the words you’re reading, and if you found out that it was a robot, you’d rightly feel betrayed.

I think I need to be clear about this: That will never happen here, and if you don’t think this is ok industry-wide, if you think it’s important that sites like this one exist, then you should become a member. Right now.

It used to be my belief that it doesn’t matter if all these sites create slop or use AI, because it’ll eventually differentiate our real work. I’m more bothered by this now because it’s immediately impacting how we make money.

All this slop is being created at an exponential rate and swarming the usual networks where our content is shared. These sites are also the ones most likely to be overwhelmed with ads. This means that not only is it harder for our content to be seen, but when it is seen that the value of the ads we show is lower because there’s a glut of inventory.

ADVERTISEMENT

I went to a conference for publishers this week in Georgia, and there’s going to be more crap like this, not less, in the future. It’s InEVitable…

If we are going to survive the storm, we need more help. Please consider becoming a member if you haven’t, if only to show that there are still people who think good journalism is worth paying for.

Hat tip to Alberto for pointing this out!

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
136 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 hours ago

“AI is a fad.”
-Paul Krugman, probably

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
3 hours ago

I mean, there will be a Trough of Disappointment, quite possibly deep and wide enough to take out some of the major players – in the media space that’ll be the ones that are loudly and proudly “AI-Powered”.

Spikersaurusrex
Member
Spikersaurusrex
4 hours ago

“They don’t care who generated the illustration…They love it or they hate it. AI doesn’t come up. I think eventually, writing is going to get that way. [Readers] just want a cool story told, they don’t really care how.” -Motortrend as quoted in the article above.

There’s so much wrong with this. Let’s take it piece by piece.

“They don’t care who generated the illustration…” I care whether it’s a Torch illustration or an AI illustration. I care whether it’s an authentic diagram rather than AI generated garbage like that famous brake system illustration.

“I think eventually, writing is going to get that way.” Content creation by an AI engine is not writing. It’s plagiarism if you’re lucky and often just plain incorrect.

“[Readers] just want a cool story told, they don’t really care how.” Of course we care how the story is told. If people didn’t care how the story was told, everything could just be a list of facts. I often read an article here without looking at the author’s name, and I can almost always tell who wrote it right away, and that’s awesome.

Also, I don’t just want a cool story, I want accuracy. It’s easy to write a cool story about how Fernando Alonso won the GP last week, but it wouldn’t be true. Spreading misinformation, which appears to be what AI is best at, can cause real harm.

OK, rant over.

Jack Swansey
Member
Jack Swansey
3 hours ago

Picking up where your rant left off. Readers don’t just want a cool story. We want a true story.

I’ve been watching Donut’s cross-country cheap car challenge thing, and seeing them rock-crawl an SVT Focus in Moab was genuinely some of the best car stuff I’ve ever seen.

Based on whats-his-name’s big theory, I’d have felt exactly the same way if it had been an AI-generated video of the same. Maybe it’d even have been cooler, since the AI-generated Focus wouldn’t have had to quit halfway up the trail to save the clutch!

We all know that the AI version of that wouldn’t have meant anything. What happened to “it’s about the journey, not the destination?” and “the real {x} was the friends we made along the way?”

There’s literally an AI company called “Friend” that makes some embarrassing doodad you wear around your neck that records your whole life and comments on it, so you never have to make any actual friends. And you probably can’t, since everyone will know you as the dipshit with a Ring doorbell around your neck.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
5 hours ago

I’ll say it again…

If a human being can’t be bothered to write it, *this* human being can’t be bothered to read it.

Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
5 hours ago

Just ugh. Keep on trucking, do what’s right, stay solvent and hopefully by the time this AI crap implodes you can actually show there’s another way.

The issue is not really AI but MONEY, specifically a new shiny way to make lots of it. Just ask Sam Altman and skip the crap of how he wants to help humanity.

The mind blowing part is the hordes of (supposedly) smart people like Ed not minding this or outright embracing it because a little money (to him anyways). He’s like that Hoboken, NJ mayor caught red-handed by an FBI agent taking a $5,000 bribe.

Last edited 4 hours ago by Horizontally Opposed
Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
5 hours ago

last time I really visited Jalopnik was months ago when I noticed that they had posted two almost identical “list articles” about an hour or so apart, supposedly from the same author.

comments were full of how strange and obvious it was.

ILikeBigBolts
ILikeBigBolts
4 hours ago
Reply to  Stryker_T

Yeah… That’s about it. Every once in a while Jalopnik publishes something interesting, or a different take on some bit of news, but 90% of the stuff in my feed reader from them is just… garbage. And I’m sad for them. Jalopnik USED to be pretty good, but now it’s just automotive-themed Taboola listicles and crap churned out by whoever needs a buck and a byline.

Pilotgrrl
Member
Pilotgrrl
3 hours ago
Reply to  Stryker_T

Who reads their articles? The comments are more informative.

FormerTXJeepGuy
Member
FormerTXJeepGuy
5 hours ago

I absolutely loathe AI and can’t wait for this bubble to pop

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago

S A M E

And stop shoving it into various websites and apps where it only gets in the way!!!

FastBlackB5
FastBlackB5
4 hours ago
Reply to  Stef Schrader

I had a discussion with some students today about how they spend 5 minutes asking chatgpt how to change the scale of a model…. architectural scale. the formula is feet/scale its basic math and they were surprised it was so fast and easy to do. They are taught that formula. But they are also taught that phone has all the answers so they don’t need to know anything.

The Ai is not intelligent, its just a pattern tool. it’s dumb and relies on the same part of our brain that attributes human feelings and emotion and meaning to random shit, animals, and objects. “no ai doesn’t have an idea, not that bird isn’t sad, no that tree doesn’t love you.”

Pilotgrrl
Member
Pilotgrrl
3 hours ago
Reply to  FastBlackB5

This! I call it autocorrect on steroids.

FastBlackB5
FastBlackB5
3 hours ago
Reply to  Pilotgrrl

I have workers who are Computer science majors, they say its only good for creating code you have to then debug. I had it explained as huge “if/then/also” guessing code that looks like its doing something new. He says the complexity of voice to text to number to text and back is so wasteful for what you get.

Jsloden
Jsloden
5 hours ago

90% of jalopnik is either AI or just dumping on the current government and Elon. I’m glad other writers and editors are finally calling out the AI bull crap. The weekend articles are hilarious.

FastBlackB5
FastBlackB5
3 hours ago
Reply to  Jsloden

They are owned by private equity. PE is invested in Ai, they hope to replace the pennies per word model with the all Ai model for better return on investment. They need Ai to work to justify the cost of it already. If Ai doesn’t replace a ton of people and cost, it was never worth it. Surprise, its not. If the current investment cost of Ai continues, the only way it makes its money back is displacing millions of jobs. Even then the Ai companies will need to get their investment back so, for everyone else, the cost will be near the same as paying the people to have done it in the first place.

You can smell the desperation when all the Ai invested companies start pushing it into everything even when there is no point or it doesn’t work, or they start telling people it will fix every problem and save the world and conquer the stars. Does that sound like something you have heard?

Its the new version of adding E or I to a product form the late 90’s early 2000s. That worked out well right, no bubble burst then…

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
5 hours ago

Editor’s Note: This article was written with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI). Future articles in this series will also be AI-assisted.

Hey, Ed. You should put this at the top of the article so I know not to bother reading it.

If there’s so little to add in the piece that it can be plopped out by a summary-chatbot, what’s the point of writing it? Or me reading it?

These theftbots (gonna call ’em what they are as I sure as hell didn’t consent to my work training them) are so wasteful and damaging to both the environment and the communities around them that I’m actively disgusted that some of my work might be used in that Hearst data-use partnership. I know I likely signed all rights to my freelance work over to the publisher to use and reuse as they see fit, but just in case there’s a hole here, is there any way to object to using my work for that purpose?

Whale-Tail
Member
Whale-Tail
5 hours ago

This is why I have a membership here and haven’t gone to Jalopnik in years

Tbird
Member
Tbird
5 hours ago
Reply to  Whale-Tail

I still check in on occasion but 85% is garbage.

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
5 hours ago
Reply to  Whale-Tail

I used to write there, I have tremendous respect for friends who work there, and I can’t hardly look anymore because what it’s become is so depressing. I’m extremely grateful when one goes, “look at my cool work” on Jello Picnic because I can’t bear to dig through the slop. It’s mortifying that a lot of my best work was stripped of the images that gave it context and is now surrounded by the kind of inaccurate, low-effort trash that would’ve given any of my editors when I wrote for that site an aneurysm.

The slop trend needs to die, and I hope it doesn’t take out human writers’ livelihoods a la The Facebookening when it does.

Theftbots might die out on their own, though—Ed Zitron’s had some good work out there explaining just how badly all of this AI garbage is burning through cash. Here’s hoping the unsustainable business model of the theftbots takes ’em out of public use sooner rather than later.

Last edited 5 hours ago by Stef Schrader
FastBlackB5
FastBlackB5
3 hours ago
Reply to  Stef Schrader

I have wondered how easy and cheap you could build a set up to prompt Ai and use the prompt to feed Ai until all the Ai is taking in 90% only Ai. Could you make it so all the info the all the Ai looks at is so bad it just loops back on itself in an ouroboros of slop.

Ishkabibbel
Member
Ishkabibbel
2 hours ago
Reply to  Whale-Tail

Last time I looked at Jalop the straight up unfettered Elon / CyberTruck ragebait was at 11 and needed to be at a 1 or 2.

Spikersaurusrex
Member
Spikersaurusrex
5 hours ago

I said the other day that I come here because you guys are genuine and I meant it. All of this slop is just annoying. I avoid it as much as I can. It doesn’t matter whether it’s generated by “AI” or by people willing to churn out crap, it just sucks. I fail to see any actual benefit to AI in most cases and I think that it’s probably a net harm when you look at the resources consumed by their data centers. We complain about the cost of eggs, but electricity is getting more expensive due to data centers, and while I can give up eggs, I can’t give up electricity.

They say it’s the future, but I don’t think it’s sustainable.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
5 hours ago

AI data centers should be charged $5 per kwh and $40 per gallon of water used

The profits would go to the communities near the power gobbler, as well as a fund for people who lost their jobs to that shit plus another fund to compensate the sources that train it in the first place.

If the power goes out due to an emergency or storm or something, the data center would have to be shut down for the entire emergency plus another 30 days after it’s over

Harvey Firebirdman
Member
Harvey Firebirdman
2 hours ago
Reply to  Dogisbadob

The new (I think 11 billion) Amazon data center going up next to my work in Indiana has caused residents to need to drill new wells since the water line has gone down no much from them there. Amazon obliviously is denying it but yeah a local town is looking at sueing them and I know the run off pond at work the ground crew guys are saying it is lower then it has ever been. Oh and this data center is supposed to use as much power as half the residents in Indiana ridiculous. I live roughly 45 miles away from there so I haven’t had to deal with needing a new well but hopefully no new data centers go up around my house.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
5 hours ago

Motor Trend was always slop.

That was before AI even existed.

Now it can officially be called AI slop. How fancy. Shit has a new name.

Mark my works that MT won’t make it another 5 years.

Drew
Member
Drew
5 hours ago

The content generators all seem to be AI or people just regurgitating things they saw on TikTok, neither of which is helpful, useful, enlightening, or entertaining. And embracing AI while selling your output to AI just speeds up the slop. AI training on AI doesn’t lead anywhere good. So they’ll definitely ramp up the blatant theft of IP.

Last edited 5 hours ago by Drew
Mercedes Streeter
Mercedes Streeter
5 hours ago

Someone on the inside at Jalopnik has informed me that there are real people behind the utterly bizarre stories being published at Jalopnik and SlashGear right now. However, a lot of the new people are using AI for research, and it shows.

They recently published a piece that stated in confidence that turboprop airliners are “weird” and rare. They are not that weird and definitely aren’t rare by any stretch.

One of the other people published a story stating that you should not shift gears above 2,500 RPM or so because it “reduces engine performance.” I’m sorry, what? Many gasoline engines don’t even make peak power until right before redline.

Maymar
Maymar
5 hours ago

I wonder what that content creator (won’t grant them writer) thinks will happen if you drive a typical car on the highway.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
5 hours ago
Reply to  Maymar

In this age, it’s possible that they’ve never driven a car.

Drew
Member
Drew
5 hours ago

Yeah, that’s what happens when they are hiring people who aren’t car people, but SEO people. They’ll pump out the slop the search engines like and not have the knowledge to catch basic factual errors. But because the search engines like them, they’ll look successful, at least until the house of cards comes crashing down.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
5 hours ago

I mean, I’m pretty sure I have a bad injector causing a misfire in cylinder 5 of the Z4, so by some tortured logic they’re not totally wr…

Yeah they’re still massively wrong. They clearly aren’t talking about limp modes and misfires. They also clearly don’t know what they’re talking about.

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
5 hours ago

Having someone run a search and then copy/paste the AI generated result into an article doesn’t make it not AI.

Black Peter
Black Peter
5 hours ago

One of the other people published a story stating that you should not shift gears above 2,500 RPM

Ummm wut? Single cylinder diesel maybe?

Harvey Firebirdman
Member
Harvey Firebirdman
2 hours ago
Reply to  Black Peter

I mean my 12v Cummins is governed at 2700 rpm so I guess maybe they have only driven 12v Cummins? Haha

DysLexus
Member
DysLexus
5 hours ago

I imagine someone a lot more savvy than me has thought of this already.

We know:
Motortrend and others are using AI to scour for content easily and churn out “stories” as fast as possible to generate income.

Is it possible to flood these stories with millions of fake AI generated “readers”?
So:
Hearst Magazines earning call in first month would look tremendous. CEO states that data shows “Readership” is up 5000% this month. CEO asks? “Is this real, can’t be.” I’m not paying our content providers for this.

Could we use AI generated “readership” to effectively shut down shitty sites?
Asking for a friend

Mercedes Streeter
Mercedes Streeter
5 hours ago
Reply to  DysLexus

What you’re describing is a click farm. I haven’t really seen them in use by any serious car website, but they are a scourge on social media. Have you ever seen a post by a nobody with no followers, but the post has like a million views and a thousand comments? Oh, and like all of those comments are nonsense like “cool” or “amen.” Yeah, it’s probably just one big phony from top to bottom.

Pilotgrrl
Member
Pilotgrrl
3 hours ago

I’ve seen YouTube videos made by AI with only bot comments. They deserve each other.

Jsloden
Jsloden
5 hours ago

I’m a school teacher and the reason the articles are crap is the same reason students fail tests. They use AI to make up for their lack of knowledge in a certain area and usually end up looking like idiots when it backfires because the AI knew even less about the topic then they did. Students are too lazy to study for a test just like the writers are too lazy to do actual research for an article. One writes a garbage article and the other fails a test.

Last edited 5 hours ago by Jsloden
Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago
Reply to  Jsloden

I keep screaming that these predictive-text chatbots don’t actually “know” anything—they just predict the most plausible string of text that might go next. They’re not intelligent. They’re not insightful.

I call them theftbots for a reason. We’ve got to make it deeply uncool to use this trash, TBH.

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago

Who’s their editor, though? Do they even have one?

I like the Jalopnik and SlashGear crew, but it’s absolutely absurd and embarrassing that an editor isn’t pushing back against the inaccurate, poorly written trash gumming up the page. It’s tanking the site network’s credibility and the regular writers deserve better.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
5 hours ago

I had been looking forward to DT’s engineering deep dive into the difference between the old and new Chevy Bolt, but now I want to check out the AI-powered one from MT, to see if the brakes have the same interchangeable cakesstor and urinek as the old ones.

David Tracy
Admin
David Tracy
5 hours ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

I want to see the new Bolt in-person. Then I’ll go in deep.

Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 hours ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Bolts deep.

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

COTD

JurassicComanche25
Member
JurassicComanche25
5 hours ago

I hate that its called AI, its just CGT. It doesnt think, it just steals snippets from what it finds in searches and slaps it together. Theres a reason why people on facebook and reddit give BS answers, so the clankers get it all wrong.

Keep it up here, guys- ill support you all until I cant anymore.

And if I win the lotto, im buying that big ol membership. Make Adrian drive a Th!nk for a month. Right after fully funding my local animal shelter.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
5 hours ago

Computer Generated Theft

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago
Reply to  Dogisbadob

…….okay, this may also be COTD.

Jack Swansey
Member
Jack Swansey
3 hours ago

Why have CGT when you can have CCGT?

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
5 hours ago

There’s a word for this, and you don’t even have to go to German.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/slang/enshittification

And I can’t remember the last time I looked at Motor Trend, or really any of the traditional car sites, for their articles. CD has some nice background info on specific car models – test results and option packages.

The the content at Jalopnik is really amazingly bad. I rarely go there anymore. It seems to be all very basic “why are wheels round” articles or clickbait.

Spopepro
Member
Spopepro
5 hours ago
Reply to  Emil Minty

To recap the most succinct part of Doctorow’s thesis:

First they make things good for the users.
Then they exploit the users to make things good for the vendors/advertisers.
Then they exploit the vendors/advertisers to make things good for the investors.
Then they die.

DysLexus
Member
DysLexus
5 hours ago

Thank you Matt (and all of Autopia) for being professionals that profoundly care.

I don’t care for all that AI generated “slop” that floods the internet trying to grab trillions of “clicks/likes/views” to rack up big numbers to justify their existence.

It won’t be long until someone designs fake AI-generated “readers/consumers” of all this crap. Someone could use zillions of AI-generated humans to simply “click/like/view” all this crap content. Eventually, the system would explode because the fake views match the fake posts in the gazillions and then all the servers get fried.

What’s left standing are journalists that care and readers that are real.

Again, I respect your professionalism and your caring about a real product.

Harvey Firebirdman
Member
Harvey Firebirdman
2 hours ago
Reply to  DysLexus

They already have that with both farms. YouTube is terrible with the bots that steal other comments. That is what is funny about all of this AI stuff just like googles when you search something nowadays and it gives you a text blurp of info stolen from other locations companies like google or meta make money off clicks because of advertisers but when you literally have bots/ai spewing everything out and no one is clicking on websites/ads anymore that revenue is going to tank.

Tbird
Member
Tbird
5 hours ago

Keep up the good fight. You have the best content on the Web.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
5 hours ago

In all seriousness I’d love to feed a few of the most unhinged Torch articles to a slop machine and see what sort of madness it shits out

Brockstar
Member
Brockstar
5 hours ago

This would be hilarious. I feel like we need Torchentic AI chatbot on the website to hang out with.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
5 hours ago
Reply to  Brockstar

The server farm is three Commodore 64s in series.

Drew
Member
Drew
5 hours ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

I think the plural here is Commodores 64. Or, since it’s three, Commodores 192.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
5 hours ago
Reply to  Brockstar

Hello Autopians! Would you rather *short circuit noise* FUCK a taillight or drive a Beetle with only 3 wheels to your own funeral?!

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
5 hours ago

That’s not AI, that’s just straight up plagiarism

Drew
Member
Drew
5 hours ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

That’s like saying that your sandwich isn’t lunch, just the midday meal.

Last edited 5 hours ago by Drew
Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
5 hours ago
Reply to  Drew

I know. I left out all the contradictions and problems with AI for the sake of the joke. Actual AI, as the term is used commonly today, is a craven machine that ingests creation and vomits garbage. If you’re lucky, in a manner of speaking, you’ll get garbage so close the source it is “just” plagiarism.

JShaawbaru
Member
JShaawbaru
5 hours ago
Reply to  Brockstar

Hopefully that never becomes a thing, because I will leave this place the instant it appears.

MP81
Member
MP81
5 hours ago

The AI will hallucinate Torch’s hallucinations.

I can only imagine the result.

Spopepro
Member
Spopepro
5 hours ago

In truth, you’d probably just need to add “Beetle” or “taillight” features to an LLM, like Anthropic did with Golden Gate Claude.

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
5 hours ago

New benefit for members, Exclusive access to the Torch AI. Chat with Torch on everything from headlight to taillights. Just don’t mention the movie Cars.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
4 hours ago

Torch articles might be the antidote. Feed a data center his life’s work, and it might explode.

This is the highest compliment I can give anything, btw.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
6 hours ago

AI:

Yes, the Jeep Grand Cherokee is known as the Jeep Royale in Europe, and available with Cheese.

Andrew Daisuke
Andrew Daisuke
6 hours ago

AI serves zero purpose other than to make already rich people slightly richer.

Reject it.

Mike B
Mike B
6 hours ago
Reply to  Andrew Daisuke

We were talking about AI in the office just yesterday, I told my boss that we could live in world where AI makes everything so efficient and productive that we’d only have to work a few days a week yet make more money, but the reality is that ten already rich people at the top will get incredibly richer while the rest of us end up jobless and broke.

Last edited 6 hours ago by Mike B
Mighty Bagel
Member
Mighty Bagel
6 hours ago

For the record, I don’t think that Motor1 has anything but AI written clickbait slop anymore, if they ever did.

Black Peter
Black Peter
5 hours ago
Reply to  Mighty Bagel

So many of these sites are pushed to my news feed.. Often the headline is enough to decide slop/not slop.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
6 hours ago

This is the place that made Adrian Clarke drive a Ssangyong Rodius to the Goodwood Festival of Speed. If you aren’t a member by now, I don’t know what hope there is for you, or for this world.

Jonathan Green
Jonathan Green
5 hours ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

AI couldn’t come up with putting AC into a Ssangyong Rodius and sending him to the Goodwood Festival of Speed, simply because it has no understanding of good and evil.

Scott
Member
Scott
6 hours ago

Fu¢k AI.

MaximillianMeen
Member
MaximillianMeen
4 hours ago
Reply to  Scott

Pretty sure there are products available on Temu that will allow you to do that.

Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
4 hours ago

Heck, I’m sure there were whole startup companies in the sexbots-and-teledildonics sections of consumer tech conferences that decided to bounce on this buzzword’s male input.

Last edited 4 hours ago by Stef Schrader
MaximillianMeen
Member
MaximillianMeen
4 hours ago
Reply to  Stef Schrader

Never underestimate the power of sex and porn to drive technology.

136
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x