Cheaply produced, AI-generated images and videos are flooding social platforms, blurring the line between fact and fiction and rewarding engagement over accuracy, critics say. The phenomenon—dubbed “AI slop”—ranges from whimsical fakes to political deepfakes amplified by high-profile figures, illustrating how synthetic media can travel faster than corrections. With low barriers to creation and powerful distribution via recommendation algorithms, the content draws clicks that translate into ad dollars for tech platforms. Companies like Google, Meta and OpenAI are rolling out consumer-friendly AI video tools while pledging guardrails, but researchers warn users easily sidestep restrictions. Critics also note AI’s growing environmental footprint, citing heavy electricity and water demands. The result, experts argue, is a social internet increasingly optimized for attention, not truth.





























