A new study suggests AI-generated junk content has become one of TikTok’s defining features. Worse still, children and educational content appear to be among the platform’s hardest-hit corners.
A new Kapwing report found that 59% of videos shown to new TikTok accounts are AI slop, roughly three times the rate found on YouTube.
As YouTube cracks down on low-quality AI content, faceless creators who built real audiences without showing their face are now struggling to stay monetized.
Where do you draw the line between AI slop and real content?
Spotify is testing a new tool that lets artists approve songs before release, as AI-generated spam and fraud expose how easily fake tracks can hijack profiles and distort payouts.
The idea behind the new tool is to give artists more control over which tracks are associated with their name on Spotify.
A new investigation reveals YouTube’s algorithm floods kids’ feeds with bizarre AI videos after trusted channels, while creators profit from the synthetic content with millions of views.
The post Investigation finds YouTube is serving mindless AI slop …
A Kapwing study reveals how AI slop has become a global presence on YouTube, with billions of views and growing influence across multiple markets.
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