• AI workslop is overrunnin

    From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to All on Fri Sep 26 10:07:04 2025
    First, AI flooded the internet with slop, now it's destroying work, too this is how you use AI and still be a stellar employee

    Date:
    Thu, 25 Sep 2025 15:30:00 +0000

    Description:
    AI workslop is overrunning the workplace, and we need to do something about
    it fast.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    If there's one thing we can depend on AI for, it's to prove time and time
    again that you can't simply replace human effort with technology. A new
    Harvard Business Review and Stanford Media Lab study found that "workslop"
    is overrunning business and, in the process, ruining work and reputations.

    If workslop sounds familiar, that's because it's a cousin to AI slop . The latter is all over the internet and characterized by bad art, poor writing, six-fingered videos, and auto-tuned-sounding music.

    Workslop, according to HBR, is " AI generated work content that masquerades
    as good work, but lacks the substance to meaningfully advance a given task ."

    Because we're living on AI Time and everything in technology (and life)
    seems, thanks to generative AI, to be happening at three times its normal
    pace, we suddenly have Large Language Model (LLM)-driven AI in every corner
    of our lives.

    Generative platforms like Gemini , Copilot , Claude , and ChatGPT live on our phones, and while Google search still far outstrips ChatGPT as a tool for
    basic search results, more and more people are turning to ChatGPT when they want deeper, richer, and theoretically more useful answers.

    That trend continues in the workplace, where, seemingly overnight, tools like Gemini and Copilot are embedded in productivity apps like Gmail and Microsoft Word.

    They're capable of generating: Summaries Reports Presentations Redsearch
    Coding Graphics

    And it's clear from this report that there has been a quick and broad embrace of these tools for these and many other office tasks. In fact, workers might
    be squeezing a little too tight.

    In the study, 40% of respondents reported receiving workslop, and they're
    none too happy about it. They report being confused and even offended.

    Even worse, workslop is changing how they view coworkers.

    The problem with workslop is that while it appears to be complete and high-quality work, it is often not. AI can still produce errors and hallucinations. OpenAI's GPT-5 model is the first major update to address the hallucination issue, stopping ChatGPT from filling in the blanks with
    guesswork when it doesn't know something. Still, it and other AIs are not perfect.

    The work is often weirdly cookie-cutter, in that these are still programs (highly complex ones) that rely on a handful of go-to terms like "delve", "pivotal", "realm", and "underscore."

    It's not clear if the workers using AI to build reports and projects
    recognize this, but their coworkers and managers appear to be aware, and
    let's just say that the workers' next performance evaluations may not be recognizing them for "originality."

    A bad look

    According to the report, peers perceive that AI-work-product-delivering coworkers as less capable, reliable, and trustworthy. They also think they're less creative and intelligent.

    Now, that seems a bit unfair. After all, it does take some effort to create a prompt or series of prompts that will result in a finished project.

    Still, the reaction to this workslop indicates that people are not
    necessarily curating the work. Instead of a series of prompts delivered to
    the AI to create some output, they might be plugging in one prompt, seeing
    the results, and deciding, "That's good enough."

    The cycle of unhappiness continues when managers and peers report this
    workslop to their managers. It's a bad look all around, especially if the workslop makes it out of a company and into a client's hands.

    What's been lost in this rush to use generative AI as a workplace tool is
    that it was never intended to replace us or, more specifically, our brains.
    The best work comes from our creative spark and deep knowledge of context,
    two things AI decidedly lacks.

    When I asked ChatGPT, "Do you think it's a good idea for me to ask you to do work for me and then for me to present it to my boss?" it did a decent job of putting the issue in perspective.

    Mostly, ChatGPT discussed how it can help in research and outlining the first version of a project, being a time saver to cut down on repetitive tasks, and helping me generate fresh ideas.

    It warned me, however, about Originality & Attribution Accuracy Ethics and Expectations

    It was almost as if ChatGPT had already read the HBR study. Even it knows workslop is bad.

    How do we avoid workslop?

    HBR had some ideas, and I think it's pretty simple. Remind everyone that AI
    is not the answer to every problem.

    Ensure that everyone knows when it's best to use AI and understands what
    should happen to the AI output, i.e., editing, fact-checking, shaping, or rewriting.

    Start viewing AI as a very smart assistant, not as another, smarter version
    of yourself.

    Insist on more in-person meetings and direct collaboration. Reembrace the beauty of a brainstorm.

    Workslop, like AI slop before it, will surely get worse before it gets
    better, and there is a real chance that we may soon no longer know the difference between original human work and AI-generated projects, but I hope that day never comes. We can figure this out. Even ChatGPT knows the answer:

    "Think of me as your co-writer or research assistant , not a ghostwriter.
    Take what I give you, refine it, make sure its in your voice, and add your personal expertise. That way, youre delivering something polished but still authentically yours."

    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/first-ai-flooded-the-interne t-with-slop-now-its-destroying-work-too-this-is-how-you-use-ai-and-still-be-a- stellar-employee

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