AI Slop: The Synthetic Flood Polluting the Internet

Dark Side of AI · Report

AI SLOP: THE SYNTHETIC FLOOD POLLUTING THE INTERNET

The web is filling with machine-made filler. Generative AI has made it almost free to produce text, images, and audio at infinite scale — and the result is “AI slop”: low-quality synthetic content that crowds out human work, games search engines, fuels a new fake-news industry, and erodes the line between real and fake. The pollution is now measurable.

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By The AI Index·Updated ·6 min read

Key takeaways

  • AI now writes most new web pages: 74.2% of newly published pages contain AI-generated content, and AI articles overtook human-written ones in late 2024. (Ahrefs, 2025)
  • A new fake-news industry: 1,271+ unreliable AI-generated news sites are tracked across 16 languages. (NewsGuard, 2025)
  • It is monetized: blue-chip brand ads routinely run on AI content farms publishing fabricated stories.
  • The trust cost: leading chatbots still repeat false claims about 62% of the time on adversarial news prompts. (NewsGuard, 2024)
74.2%
of new web pages contain AI-generated content
1,271
unreliable AI news sites tracked (16 languages)
75M
spam tracks removed by Spotify in a year

The flood

The tipping point has arrived. In April 2025, Ahrefs analyzed 900,000 newly published English-language pages and found 74.2% contained AI-generated content; by late 2024, the monthly volume of AI-written articles on the open web had, for the first time, exceeded human-written ones. Most of this is not deliberate disinformation — it is cheap filler built to capture search traffic and ad clicks. But at this volume it degrades search results, buries original reporting, and risks future models training on the synthetic exhaust of earlier ones.

“74.2% of newly published pages contain AI-generated content — and AI articles overtook human-written ones in late 2024.”

The fake-news economy

Slop shades into something worse when it wears the costume of journalism. NewsGuard has identified 1,271+ unreliable AI-generated news and information sites across 16 languages, many churning out fabricated stories with minimal human oversight. These farms are funded by programmatic advertising: in one 2025 case, a fabricated story about Coca-Cola and the Super Bowl ran alongside ads from major brands including Expedia, AT&T, and GoDaddy — the advertisers unaware their budgets were bankrolling fake news.

Music, books, and reviews

The flood spans every medium. A fully AI-generated “band,” the Velvet Sundown, racked up more than a million Spotify plays in mid-2025 before its synthetic origins were widely noticed; Spotify says it removed 75 million spam tracks over the prior year. Online stores have filled with AI-written books and fake reviews, making it harder for readers and shoppers to tell authentic work from machine output.

The cost to trust

The deepest damage is to the information commons. When most new content is synthetic and a meaningful share is wrong — NewsGuard’s audits found leading models repeating false claims about 62% of the time on prompts mimicking real influence operations — the baseline assumption that online content is human and checkable breaks down. The defenses are the same ones surfacing across this series: provenance and labeling (C2PA), AI-content detection, and platforms enforcing quality, not just volume.

Methodology & sources

Frequently asked

How much of the internet is now AI-generated?

A 2025 Ahrefs analysis of 900,000 new pages found 74.2% contained AI-generated content, and the volume of AI-written articles overtook human-written ones in late 2024 — though “contains AI content” ranges from lightly edited to fully synthetic.

What is “AI slop”?

AI slop is low-quality, mass-produced synthetic content — articles, images, audio, reviews — generated to capture clicks or ad revenue rather than inform. At scale it pollutes search results, funds fake-news sites, and erodes trust in online information.

Cite this page

The AI Index (2026). AI Slop: The Synthetic Flood Polluting the Internet. Retrieved Jun 20, 2026, from report-ai.org/reports/dark-side-of-ai/ai-slop-content-pollution-internet/