AI slop went mainstream in 2025: Is the internet finally ready to grow up?

2025 has been well-known as the year AI slop became widespread

By Ruqia Shahid
|
December 28, 2025
AI slop went mainstream in 2025: Is the internet finally ready to grow up?

The year 2025 was defined by the hype circulating online and has become widely known as the year AI Slop became a prevalent issue.

Primarily, as of late December 2025, it has been observed that over 50% of all new English-language content on the web is AI-generated, leading to cyberspace that many described as reaching a breaking point. Aggressive AI chatbots are rapidly taking over the digital marketplace

Advertisement

From these intrusive bots to absurd e-commerce product summaries, “AI slop” reached a new peak in 2025, flooding search engines and shopping platforms with automated span.

The term has been circulating online since the early 2020s, but the data shows it reached a new peak this year.

AI slop has earned the 2025 Word of the Year title from Merriam-Webster and Australia’s national dictionary.

As the year comes to an end, a look back will help us understand how AI features have changed some of the most used sites on the internet.

AI surge fueling financial markets as they race to dominate the new economy

The rise of AI and the market hype fueling a race for economic dominance align with forecasts of major analysts. However, this shift has been limited to software; in 2025, “AI slop” moved into the physical world through a series of AI-focused hardware releases that often failed to live up to the hype.

In this regard, the Vice President of Research and Content at Nielsen Norman Group noted that there is immense pressure to perform for shareholders.

This can result in technology-led design, where the process begins with a tool rather than a need. Instead of solving existing issues, developers are starting with an AI solution and working backward to find a problem it can potentially address.

What AI can bring in the long run

AI slop has taken the internet by storm leading many sites- including Pinterest and YouTube-to introduce features that allow users to limit the AI-generated content they see.

These filters with more practical AI tools that require less user interaction, represent significant improvements in the online user experience.

This transition signifies that the “Slop Era” is not merely about the volume of content, but represents a fundamental shift in how we value the internet itself.

Advertisement