5/7/2026 at 7:42:55 PM
I run a niche creative community, and we outlawed AI-generated content in 2022 as it was easy to see how corrosive it would be to the community.It hasn't been easy. We ban fake AI accounts daily and shrug off around 600 AI content creator accounts monthly.
It's a lot of work, extra work that wasn't needed before AI content came around, and of course, that is an extra cost.
I fear losing the battle.
by CrzyLngPwd
5/8/2026 at 6:08:32 AM
High quality anecdata are exactly the reason why I love HN. Thanks for posting about it. > fake AI accounts
First, how do you identify them? Is it strictly admins monitoring posts/server-side logs or do users report odd behaviour?Second, what is the purpose of these accounts? Are they basically running submarine adverts, or are they just trolling (to harm the community)?
by throwaway2037
5/8/2026 at 6:44:33 AM
A starting point for study;AI Deception: A Survey of Examples, Risks, and Potential Solutions - https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.14752
Deception Analysis with Artificial Intelligence: An Interdisciplinary Perspective - https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.05724
by rramadass
5/8/2026 at 9:36:37 AM
Some background (pre-AI) ;Online Deception in Social Media - https://cacm.acm.org/research/online-deception-in-social-med...
by rramadass
5/8/2026 at 11:22:13 AM
Eagerness.. you let them work through a endless labyrinth of forms. While the human drops out after the 2nd form- the ai is willing to go all the way always.by 21asdffdsa12
5/8/2026 at 11:40:55 AM
Don't you lose really users by making it easy for bots to complete a sign up, but hard for humans?by spoiler
5/8/2026 at 12:59:57 PM
Maybe 5 required fields and 30 optional fields. Apart from "census dweebs" [1] I don't know of many people that fill in more than the required.[1]: https://thebeaverton.com/2026/05/local-nerd-disappointed-he-...
by Cyan488
5/8/2026 at 2:15:35 PM
I'm not familiar with the specific example, but as a first hunch, if I had to implement such a system, it'd be part of the flow after the successful signup, not during.by kyusan0
5/11/2026 at 7:47:29 AM
You could also pretend to pass-through and watch the behavior of the "user" after success.by 21asdffdsa12
5/9/2026 at 9:42:32 PM
We review all signups and their submitted content, and we have a fake account type "AI creator" which we record, so if they tried that first, it's a clue.We also integrate a third-party AI detection tool that checks their uploaded content before they get access to the community, and we use a second third-party tool as a double-check, and if we still doubt ourselves, we'll ask for their workings-outs in some way that is relevant to their creative type.
We also ask them to prove they are the author of their work through various time-tested mechanisms.
I have no idea why people do the things they do. People are a mystery to me.
by CrzyLngPwd
5/12/2026 at 1:27:41 PM
> we have a fake account type "AI creator" which we record
This is genius! The LLM is so dumb that it falls for the honeypot. > We also ask them to prove they are the author of their work through various time-tested mechanisms.
I would love to know more details, but it is not a good idea to share on a public platform. That said, if it is working for you, then hats off: You have found/developed a effective "defense in layers" strategy.
by throwaway2037
5/8/2026 at 12:00:40 PM
I always find the most difficult is to deal with users who are not actively breaking any rules but are toxic and hurting the conversation. Given your experience, what's your take on handling this?by ricardobayes
5/8/2026 at 12:54:06 PM
Ban them. I also recommend making it explicit: your last rule should be “moderators have final discretion”.The hard part is figuring out when to apply rules leniently or strictly. For example, I think users should always be warned, then given shorter bans, before a long or perma ban (unless they break an obvious egregious rule, or they’re a suspected alt of a banned user). At the same time, you do need to kick out persistent rules lawyerers or they’ll drive away good users.
Moderators shape their community. Hacker News is decent (compared to what it could be) because of dang and tomhow. Many communities (especially on Reddit) have become echo chambers, mainly because the mods are too happy to ban people for unspoken and/or vague rules.
by armchairhacker
5/8/2026 at 4:09:48 PM
>Ban them. I also recommend making it explicit: your last rule should be “moderators have final discretion”.[...]>[...] Many communities (especially on Reddit) have become echo chambers mainly because the mods are too happy to ban people for unspoken and/or vague rules
To me, it seems you're contradicting yourself here. In the first paragraph you suggest the solution to vague rules (mods having full authority), but then in the second paragraph you admit how that turns the platform into an echo chamber.
by joe_mamba
5/8/2026 at 5:45:47 PM
The point is to have discretion but use it rarely. Reddit echo chambers use it way too often.It’s not contradictory but unfortunately impossible to fully explain, otherwise it would be explicit rules. When someone acts borderline, you must intuit when they’re acting in good or bad faith. Hence I think a first warning, then short ban, is necessary for anyone not obviously breaking a rule; because the former will be careful, but the latter will keep acting borderline again and again, avoiding exactly what you warned about while still causing malice.
by armchairhacker
5/8/2026 at 11:11:26 PM
>The point is to have discretion but use it rarely."Let's give the president dictatorial powers, but it's OK, he'll only use it rarely." Famous last words.
Please. Humans in positions of power are incredibly bad at exercising restraint. Humans are humans and make human mistakes, even judges in court give harsher sentences if they're hungry or ill or just having a bad day. Now imagine mods on a forum.
That discretion always leads to selective enforcement 100% of the time, like saying "X are below Y", that's just freedom of speech, but saying "Y are below X", that's hate speech, BAN, and other such double standards stuff like that, which turns the platform/board into an echo chamber mirroring the mod's political and emotional views.
>will keep acting borderline again and again
If someone managed to spot a pattern that can be repeat borderline, then your rules suck and you need to update them according to that pattern. He did you a favor for exposing a flaw in your rules.
by joe_mamba
5/9/2026 at 2:35:13 PM
I was wrong to imply that moderators should warn then ban users who haven’t broken a specific rule in a way that couldn’t be argued. To be clear, “borderline” means in one interpretation the user is already breaking a rule, but in a different interpretation they’re not breaking the rule. Rules aren’t formally defined, so there’s almost always a way to explain why the same thing both is and isn’t breaking a rule.To clarify and responding to specific points:
> Humans in positions of power are incredibly bad at exercising restraint
Moderators (at least the admin) already have arbitrary control. You can make the site open or federated, but even then, you moderate your instance.
> Humans are humans and make human mistakes, even judges in court give harsher sentences if they're hungry or ill or just having a bad day. Now imagine mods on a forum.
Yes, but there’s no oracle that won’t make mistakes. The rules themselves aren’t formally defined, and the enforcers are humans (or AI automods trained to mimic or programmed by humans, who are generally less effective).
> That discretion always leads to selective enforcement 100% of the time, like saying "X are below Y", that's just freedom of speech, but saying "Y are below X", that's hate speech, BAN, and other such double standards stuff like that, which turns the platform/board into an echo chamber mirroring the mod's political and emotional views.
I believe free speech is important, but also free association. Not all forums should have free speech (excluding spam), because some people will leave if others are present.
Also, everyone has subconscious unintentional bias and double standards. A moderator will selectively apply the rules, because being human, they make mistakes. But that’s OK, because even among users who believe in “no double standards”, different users will subconsciously perceive the same treatment as fair or unfair.
The key to a good forum that’s not a moderator’s views echo chamber, but also keeps interesting people (not devolving into a troll and/or toxic-personality echo chamber), is to enforce double standards that most people agree with. e.g. often insulting a public figure is fine, insulting a specific forum user is not, or if a forum user is a famous public figure, mildly insulting them is fine outside of discussions they participate in.
The problem with most subreddits is that they’re too quick to dismiss users as bad faith, speech as hate speech and trolling, etc. Some speech that offends certain groups should be OK, because certain groups are too easily offended. But even the leftists I know say things that would get them banned on many left-leaning subreddits.
If you want a forum that allows hate speech, I think that’s fine, although your users will only be people who tolerate hate speech. Otherwise, I recommend banning hate speech but being more lenient than most subreddits, but also watching for trolls who abuse this lenience to make clear their hatred anyways. Either way, you’ll want to ban some users: at least spammers, probably those who harass specific other users, probably also those who are overly cynical and hurt the “vibe”.
> If someone managed to spot a pattern that can be repeat borderline, then your rules suck and you need to update them according to that pattern. He did you a favor for exposing a flaw in your rules.
Again: I concede that if the user hasn’t actually broken a rule in a way that can be clearly explained, the rules should be updated and they should be given a pass.
But there’s no way to update the rules so that a troll can’t “borderline” break them, except with a rule like “moderators have final discretion”.
e.g. a rule like “don’t insult various groups” can have the user vaguely allude to a characterization of a group that could be derogatory, but maybe you misunderstand and it wasn’t an insult, or maybe they weren’t referring to the entire group but a subset - until they do it again and again (in different ways), even after warnings.
by armchairhacker
5/9/2026 at 2:45:32 PM
> because some people will leave if others are present.Great, they can create and move to their own echo chamber, like Bluesky. How's that going for them?
If you're on the anonymous on the internet, you should have some thick skin, and no community should cave in to accommodate the whims of a few sensitive users who want the entire internet be a sterilized comfort zone for them.
>The problem with most subreddits is that they’re too quick to dismiss users as bad faith, speech as hate speech and trolling, etc.
Same with HN. See how often green users get berated for having opinions that don't conform to the group think.
>e.g. a rule like “don’t insult various groups”
Why not "don't insult anyone" or "everyone is free to insult anyone". Why make some groups immune from criticism? Are they Pius saints? The moment you create this double standard where some animals are more equal than others, you lose all arguments of objectivity.
by joe_mamba
5/9/2026 at 9:52:04 PM
> If you're on the anonymous on the internet, you should have some thick skin, and no community should cave in to accommodate the whims of a few sensitive users who want the entire internet be a sterilized comfort zone for them.Some communities should be for users with thick skin, but there should be other communities (like BlueSky) for sensitive users. Users with thick skin are themselves a minority, so if only former existed, most people wouldn’t participate (or realistically, would create latter).
> Same with HN. See how often green users get berated for having opinions that don't conform to the group think.
HN’s (strong) echo chamber is more because of its older users than moderators. To clarify, moderators don’t entirely shape their community; dang seems to be lenient in his direct moderation (I’ve only seen him directly respond to obvious flamebait and personal attacks), so the users with reputation have more influence here.
I agree that users are downvoted and berated for expressing opinions against the groupthink, and I’d really like to see HN not hide user-flagged comments unless a moderator manually confirms that they break a specific rule. Although I don’t argue that HN is a perfect community, just that it’s decent and much better than Reddit: among other reasons, I still see way more contrarian, right-leaning, and occasionally high-quality comments.
> Why not "don't insult anyone" or "everyone is free to insult anyone". Why make some groups immune from criticism? Are they Pius saints? The moment you create this double standard where some animals are more equal than others, you lose all arguments of objectivity.
I agree with this. “Various” was bad wording on my part; I meant a rule like “don’t insult ethnic groups” as in any ethnic group, or “don’t insult religious groups” as in any religion, or “don’t insult all men or all women”. Ideally everyone belongs to a group and none get special treatment.
But note that even these rules nobody can enforce without bias and double standards; objectivity is already lost because there’s no formal definition for “insult” (or “… group”). For example, if I say “I prefer to hang out with men” am I insulting women? “I find women more attractive” am I insulting men? If someone thinks those weren’t insults, I can call one of the groups meaner or uglier, using hasher words, and especially if I do so consistently, eventually they’ll think I am insulting. If someone thinks those were insults, I can find milder ways to say the same thing (e.g. “most of my friends are men”, “I’m heterosexual”) until they don’t notice any insult. Where would you draw the line? Ultimately you’d have to keep drawing more and more lines, even for this one rule (“don’t insult all men or all women”), because there are unfathomably many ways to slightly alter the phrasing that alter the perceived level of insult, especially factoring context. And speaking of context, you must handle implicit insults: when is an insult implicit, when is it obvious and in bad faith vs. only apparent in an unintuitive interpretation and unintentional?
by armchairhacker
5/8/2026 at 2:21:43 PM
Depends a lot on the community's topic, purpose, and size.However, a sign that someone needs to be removed is if you find that the community writ-large treats them as a Missing Stair [0]. If they have refused direct requests from community moderators/leaders to address their behavior, or regressed after a short period of improvement, and if most of the community is required to do work to actively manage their toxicity, that is not sustainable.
It is a mistake I once made in managing a community. There was a person who was able to present as "pleasant enough" when the situation called for it, but who was often toxic when something didn't go perfectly (especially in a 1-on-1 setting). I allowed them to stay for too long, and the community as a whole suffered from the ambient sense of tension and hostility.
by chao-
5/8/2026 at 11:41:55 PM
By large I absolutely agree with te premise, but find too that sometimes you find someone akin to a hammer looking for nails, starts to label anyone a missing stair over the slightest incompatibility. Oft combines with a formation of a faultless in-group and a perpetual need for new villains.Its a rare thing, I dont mean to suggest its common. But it is always awkward to see when some people learn such language just to turn it into a cudgel.
by miladyincontrol
5/9/2026 at 3:32:07 AM
>sometimes you find someone akin to a hammer looking for nails, starts to label anyone a missing stair over the slightest incompatibility.I 100% agree. This is why it is important for leaders not to rely on the judgement of a single person, but on the behavior of perception of the community as a whole (which I tried to mention as a caveat in my comment).
On the other hand, if you have an overeager moderator with too much discretionary power... well that's a different community problem, and it is going to go wrong in multiple ways, not just this one :(
by chao-
5/8/2026 at 5:12:16 PM
Let users flag toxic users. Use the resulting toxicity score to filter out messages based on each reader’s toxicity tolerance level. Both the toxicity score and the tolerance level are driven by user flagging, with score decay over time to account for improved behavior.by donpark
5/8/2026 at 12:11:55 PM
In my experience it's okay to have some troll or odd users. If they do targeted campaigns against single users or small groups we ban them.by BoredPositron
5/8/2026 at 1:53:57 PM
It really depends on the community and the exact guidelines, but if someone is clearly toxic, I start with a direct message, then mute, then kick and ban.You can spend endless time with internet weirdos, the trick is acting early and also being open to reverse a decision (also saying sorry if a moderation misstake was made, it can be easy attribute something to malice that was in reality really a newb misstake - and then you say sorry, explain that you are not paid and have also the real world to deal with at times and then all is good and with those who are really bad, well, one should not be light skinned and be able to tolerate some vague and concrete threats).
by lukan
5/8/2026 at 5:19:27 PM
You identify what it is that they are doing that is hurting the conversation and articulate it into a written guideline.Why, examples of how to do this can be found in the guidelines for this very HackerNews site!
by kazinator
5/8/2026 at 2:31:24 PM
Hackernews' approach is hellbans. FWIW that seems to work pretty well here at least.by RankingMember
5/8/2026 at 4:48:07 PM
The combo of quick bans and incrementally earned rights seems to be a pretty effective combo.by mrkstu
5/8/2026 at 5:23:10 PM
I think user-driven flagging is starting to show its cracks here, though. I'm starting to see stuff flagged to dead status, from otherwise reputable posters, because they went against the current in a thread.I really think HN should consider giving out limited mod points, like Slashdot did (does? haven't used it in 25 years.)
This would probably be the ideal* system for somewhere like Reddit, too.
* Defining "ideal" as what drives high quality discourse, not what drives engagement.
by mh-
5/7/2026 at 7:47:56 PM
Unlike a lot of communities, yours at least started on the correct side. Better to ban outright, than to slowly realize that you should have banned it.by WolfeReader
5/8/2026 at 8:33:11 AM
When it comes to slow forum content, I think it's a fool's errand to try to determine if someone is using AI for their responses. Any of the tell-tale signs of AI are easily skirted by mentioning in their prompt to not do so. It goes back to how you can't sanitize human language which has been an issue with LLM's from the beginning.Encouraging a culture of not using AI works to an extent, but I also tire of threads claiming the parent post is AI. There isn't a sure-fire way to know one way or another.
by prophesi
5/8/2026 at 1:23:25 PM
Barriers is what makes a community; by definition, if there was truly zero barriers, there would be one ambient global pot. When barriers are eliminated, communities either erect new barriers or die.The barrier of rejecting LLM content is a basic pre-requisite of any community of humans directly engaging with other humans in good faith.
There are always ways to achieve that: long vetting process and in-person meetings, high membership price, trusted computing verification, etc. It’s an arms race, but you only have to make it not worth it to the attacker.
Therefore, communities will either die, become much less accessible, or delegate human verification arms race to a service—most likely paid solutions provided by the very industry that is providing the products killing those communities[0].
[0] For example, see Altman’s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_(blockchain).
by strogonoff
5/7/2026 at 8:04:24 PM
Indeed. Take a soft approach, or "wait and see", and you'll just allow your community to get infested with slop enthusiast crybullies that loudly protest any pushback against "genai content". The communities that draw a firm line and hold it will be the only ones that endure.by RodgerTheGreat
5/7/2026 at 8:30:55 PM
It was a surprise to us how vehemently some folk defended AI content and assumed it was their right to post it within our community.We had no problems with people using it and posting elsewhere, it was the demands that we must allow it that were problematic and made us question whether we were doing the right thing.
No regrets now, though, as we see competitors being flooded with AI slop and they are too invested in it to change now.
Now I see it as the perfect tool for impostors.
by CrzyLngPwd
5/8/2026 at 6:08:17 AM
>It was a surprise to us how vehemently some folk defended AI content and assumed it was their right to post it within our community.People often confuse freedom of speech, with freedom to access a specific platform for speech.
Its dead wrong, I dont know why people would want to be in a community where they arent wanted.
by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 10:38:57 AM
> I dont know why people would want to be in a community where they arent wanted.This is standard predatory behavior. Child abusers hanging out with kids, weirdos hanging out near the women's clothing department, etc.
It's usually a clear indication of the sort of people you don't want to associate with in your online community. They bring a net negative to the table.
by lordfrito
5/8/2026 at 11:10:19 AM
What is "it"? Putting the two halves together, the sort of people who want to be in a community where they aren't wanted are the sort of people you don't want in that community. I guess I can't argue with that.by card_zero
5/8/2026 at 5:16:09 PM
They are talking about social norms. Inversely, "creepers".Most adults understand why men should not, generally, be hanging out in the women's clothing department. When accidental violations of those norms are pointed out, they apologize and correct. Creepers, OTOH, gonna creep.
For their own well-being, online communities should police repeated violation of social norms. Otherwise the normals leave and creepers take over.
by 81AB24FB
5/9/2026 at 5:52:21 AM
I spose. But labelling deviants (from the norm) and chasing them away is hazardous, because if you overdo it you end up with an echo chamber. How dare you talk to the people who others don't talk to, you traitor! Now you have to be ostracized too ... is how it might go.(I can't help thinking of the Father Ted Christmas special, where a group of priests have to organize a quasi-military operation in order to escape from Ireland's largest lingerie department without a scandal.)
by card_zero
5/8/2026 at 7:04:15 AM
I have a similar problem in a community I'm a a part of? How are you reliably detecting AI?by Seattle3503
5/8/2026 at 5:29:03 PM
It's not about perfectly identifying AI content. There's a relevant XKCD: https://xkcd.com/810/When posts fall within "acceptable" then it does not actually matter where it comes from. Logorrhea, massively offtopic, and/or shitposting are bad when humans do it. Those should suffer the same fate.
Historically it was tolerable, but has become the highest priority today because machines have cranked up the volume. If we mis-identify human garbage as robot nonsense it does not matter.
by 81AB24FB
5/8/2026 at 6:48:45 AM
It realy is time for a Butlerian Jihadby mastermage
5/8/2026 at 11:38:27 AM
Way back whenever I first read Dune, this seemed like such weird niche ban. I don't think I had a lot of respect for it.Now, like all good SciFi, it seems fairly prescient ....
by Quarrel
5/8/2026 at 11:22:51 AM
The trick is to work on site and pour the counter-measures right into the foundation :Pby 21asdffdsa12
5/7/2026 at 8:33:18 PM
What about charging $1 or $5 for an account? Seems like you could stem the tide pretty easily with something like that.by thinkingtoilet
5/8/2026 at 5:12:54 AM
This does not work, for similar reasons why captchas piss off real humans.You add a barrier here. You think that your solution means that AI is reduced, but you also reduce real humans. I noticed this with other parts too, such as "you need to verify your identity before you can post to the ruby issue tracker". I can do so, but I need my tablet and this takes me more time than before, so I stopped using the ruby issue tracker altogether. (It's not the only reason, but adding barriers really makes me invest my time elsewhere - more likely to do so at the least.)
You always need to consider all trade-offs. Charging money means you will also offset real humans at the same time. And it's not solely about the cost; it is simply a hassle to want to do so. For similar reasons I also rarely register at a phpbb forum - I need to store the password to not forget it etc... so more hassle. Using a password manager is also more of a hassle.
by shevy-java
5/8/2026 at 5:33:21 AM
Yeah, I tried to sign up for instagram, but at the fourth captcha I gave up and left. How does instagram have any users with such a hostile sign-up barrier?by m-schuetz
5/8/2026 at 5:46:11 AM
My profile picture is old enough to open an account on instagramby friendzis
5/8/2026 at 6:22:06 AM
Fun fact. There is this threads twitter clone from meta. How do I login?I "log in with Instagram", where "I log in with Facebook". Guess how well data recovery works when there is literally no password set. I'm surprised these systems work at all.
by friendzis
5/8/2026 at 9:38:55 AM
I can't access gnu.org, because their extreme measurements against the AI bots blocking my slightly older browser.by binaryturtle
5/8/2026 at 5:34:44 AM
Metafilter and Something Awful both do this.Both sites have survived and continue to work well for their users.
A small cost does definitely work for some sites.
by sien
5/8/2026 at 10:43:50 AM
Is SA still a thing? I had an account since... 2007? God I'm old. I miss the days when you could have a community that you could easily search for content. Nowadays everything is a discord black hole.by short_sells_poo
5/8/2026 at 5:41:57 AM
> Charging money means you will also offset real humans at the same time.On completely different scales. Even if it not perfect, it is strong enough of a filter to turn a bot infestation into a mild annoyance.
by rglullis
5/8/2026 at 10:54:30 AM
That's an assumption. Depending on the incentives in play, the relative scale at which AI users and real humans are affected may well be the opposite of what you expect.by account42
5/8/2026 at 12:12:11 PM
No, that's based on my experience running subscribers-only instances on the Fediverse (Mastodon, Lemmy, Matrix, Funkwhale) for more than 6 years now. I might not have that many users on the servers, but it's certainly a higher number than the zero spammers I ever got.by rglullis
5/8/2026 at 5:52:43 AM
A lot of the "add a cost to stop bad actors" end up being a selection effect in favor of bad actors.Sure, it might stop 10% of the bad actors and lower the numbers, but it'll stop 80% of the good users who aren't experts at getting around the cost or don't have an income from using the service to just pay it as a cost of business.
by nullc
5/7/2026 at 10:10:52 PM
We bringing back Something Awful, now?by ishouldstayaway
5/8/2026 at 2:37:32 PM
The :10bux: requirement did seem to do a good job of weeding out the lowest-level trash/spammers and encouraged people to toe the (sometimes very blurry) line. I remember how absolutely godawful some of the no-signup-fee SA-offshoots were (remember TheGunOwner's spin-off site "LivingWithStyle"?), to say nothing about 4chan.by RankingMember
5/8/2026 at 5:59:24 AM
No it's Something IS awful.Sorry, they did an interview about 20 years back were they kept correcting the host to 'Something is awful' I have just called it that ever since.
by HerbManic
5/7/2026 at 11:22:52 PM
It never left.by wffurr
5/8/2026 at 2:18:34 PM
Jeffery of YOSPOS bought it before Lowtax overdosed on mangosteen and it’s still operating.by quickthrowman
5/8/2026 at 5:20:11 AM
presumably most people running these bots are doing it for some financial gain. as long gain > cost the issue won't go away.It'll stop the ones doing it for the lols, but I imagine they're a minority anyway.
by slidehero
5/8/2026 at 2:27:43 PM
Or swaying opinions on hot topics. It's interesting to see how much more often politics gets injected into forums (reddit or elsewhere) on completely unrelated topics. Sometimes it's subtle, like a "signature" promoting out of the mainstream causes that then slowly make it look more mainstream.Almost all geographic subreddits (for cities/states) are overwhelmed by rage baiting posts and comment. This got worse when reddit did the moderation changes a few years ago when they went public. To them it probably just looks like more "engagement". I have no doubt various nation state actors are backing a lot of this.
by hylaride
5/8/2026 at 11:38:10 AM
Would be great to have some sort of bot trap that would just drain a dollar here and there from AI slopologists and shadowban their accounts to only interact with other AI accounts.by kdheiwns
5/7/2026 at 10:43:53 PM
Or applying for an account could involve sending a handwritten letter by post.by rgblambda
5/8/2026 at 10:50:26 AM
Adding that much friction is also going to loose you many genuine users. Might be worth it depending on the community but if it makes newcomers fewer than your usual churn rate its a death sentence.by account42
5/8/2026 at 12:04:29 PM
I think a better approach would be to upload an image to the sign up form with explicit instructions that isn't in text on the page to be easily read by AI. Like "Answer 2 in the Math captcha" even though the correct answer is 5, the AI will always enter the wrong number.by 000000000001
5/8/2026 at 4:54:05 PM
That would work for a time, like with Captchas. Then the AI would overcome it and you'd have to come up with a new idea.by rgblambda
5/8/2026 at 11:21:38 AM
True. To be fair, this was a reply to a comment about a niche community.Though it's possible that this approach could become normalised if it's proven to work at a small scale.
by rgblambda
5/8/2026 at 5:34:32 AM
Right, because I cannot possibly purchase a thousand such letters for less than the cost of minimum wage for an hour or two.by goodmythical
5/8/2026 at 10:16:30 AM
Where I live a 2nd class stamp costs the equivalent of $1.24. That's $1240 for a thousand.Not including the cost of the letter itself, or the envelope, or the cost to write it if it's being farmed out to overseas labour, who then has to send it by international postage. And then you have evidence of where the letter originated, and that can be compared with how the user presents themselves online.
Little bit more than 2 hours minimum wage I think.
by rgblambda
5/11/2026 at 8:22:22 AM
The kind of place that will make and send letters by the thousand will probably have a better deal on postage.by a96
5/11/2026 at 6:28:59 PM
I'm seeing business rates for stamps is the equivalent of $1.20 per stamp. Free delivery though.by rgblambda
5/8/2026 at 6:02:44 AM
This is fucked and I hate it. Internet is (was?) about convenience and direct access. I understand there are challenges that need solutions, but this ain’t itby iammjm
5/8/2026 at 6:14:00 AM
> wasYep. Was.
This isn’t the internet you grow up on. This is an internet scoped for bots and organizations.
by intended
5/8/2026 at 10:07:23 AM
> Internet is (was?) about convenience and direct access.Was.
Maybe you are to young to remember the (pre-spam) days when it was polite to leave your SMTP server open for others to use?
by GJim
5/8/2026 at 10:15:46 AM
Slop as a letter is a thing already https://www.axidraw.com/by robotswantdata
5/8/2026 at 10:25:05 AM
Not that I don't take your point that such a service could exist, but the site you linked explicitly says they don't offer letter writing as a service.Also, I imagine it's not impossible to reliably distinguish between an autopen and genuine handwriting. The company who's site you linked say their machine can't perform complex pen movements so calligraphy is impossible.
The real advantage of posting a letter is that you have to pay for postage, and the stamps on the envelope will indicate which country the letter is really coming from.
by rgblambda
5/8/2026 at 1:01:52 PM
If someone buys or makes something like this just to send a letter, they a) put in more human effort than writing it themselves, and b) are probably interesting and would benefit your community.by armchairhacker
5/8/2026 at 4:51:13 PM
I think what robostwantdata was suggesting was that people would supply a "Use my mechanical pen for a fee" type service, where customers send the text they want written and the address they want the letter sent to.As I've already said in my direct reply, there's still the various costs involved in posting the letter, and if the community is based on a particular geographical area e.g. "Connacht Hill Farmer's Association", then it would raise eyebrows if the envelope had a Kazakhstani stamp on it.
by rgblambda
5/7/2026 at 10:35:40 PM
If you head to Twitter right now, the vast majority of bots are blue checks. It seems to actually encourage the opposite, where you trusting that someone paying $8 for an account makes you even more likely to fall for slopby pojntfx
5/8/2026 at 12:38:24 AM
I think twitter is an odd-one-out here, twitter as a whole has been heading down hill ever since the acquisition, and I wouldn't be surprised if many of those blue checks are officially sanctioned bots. Especially given the way so many of them push the same narratives that Musk does at the same time he does.by solid_fuel
5/8/2026 at 3:18:53 AM
I don't think so.The people leaving LLM replies are paying minimum $20/month for LLM access, and probably more in practice.
A one time $10 fee is not a deterrent.
by MeetingsBrowser
5/8/2026 at 5:18:27 AM
I think you're right. I think _merely_ paying won't deter them. But, if you couple this with banning of accounts that post AI slop, you get:1) the cost becomes even higher for AI slop factories since they will probably get multiple accounts banned.
2) It prevents influence to accrue to any specific account. This diminishes the incentive for slop, since sufficient success means a ban.
3) It reduces the moderation effort since creating accounts is no longer a sustainable strategy.
by RealityVoid
5/8/2026 at 2:42:49 PM
It’s mainly an odd one out because bluechecks have access to monetization and get pushed to the top of replies. It’s basically a wishlist for bad actors.by lux-lux-lux
5/8/2026 at 5:17:15 AM
Agreed, but I left twitter even before the right-hand-raising oligarch took over. The reason was that censorship started to kick in aka twitter staff writing me a mail that my "conduct" is not appropriate. Basically they try to reduce the "aggressiveness" in written content. Well, that's already an assumption on their part; and in any discourse with orthogonal opinions, you can not really reconcile such positions anyway, so I don't need some 20 years old from India hired by Twitter to tell me what I should or should not do (though, realistically it was a bot actually that just scanned for content). I noticed that censorship is increasing on "social" websites. Reddit as an example is a mega-censorship site - the amount of deletion by crazy mods is insane.Bots are indeed killing twitter now. I noticed more and more were leaving permanently. Musk evidently accelerated the decay here. There is something wrong with his mindset here, it's almost as if it is pathological. His perception of things is genuinely distorted, and I am not even 100% certain he is completely aware of it; he must be partially aware, but it seems there is also something wrong with the brain. No wonder he gets along with Trump - that one now has clearly dementia narcissism in the final stage.
by shevy-java
5/8/2026 at 1:13:11 PM
I'm not convinced that twitter is actually trying to get rid of bots. They're OK with boosters/scammers/propaganda/agitation mills, they just want a cut.by deltoidmaximus
5/11/2026 at 8:25:08 AM
There is still no good way to send or receive such payments that works globally. Let alone one that doesn't mean leaking personal information. This will deter a lot of good users, but not many bad actors, as others have pointed out.by a96
5/8/2026 at 1:18:54 PM
There will soon be a point when you cannot even tell if the post comes from a human or AI model.by TitaRusell
5/8/2026 at 1:38:20 PM
Don't worry, every country seems to be moving toward a future in which you need to present government ID to use any online service whatsoever.This will solve the problem of automated signups ... until AI models start getting valid government IDs, too. /s
by kijin
5/8/2026 at 9:49:43 AM
Hmm i'm curious how niche.Or ... how small can a community be and still be drowned in AI slop?
Is it a community inside one of the major platforms, or it has its custom thing?
by nottorp
5/7/2026 at 11:23:24 PM
>shrug off around 600 AI content creator accounts monthly. >I fear losing the battle.I was in a small niche creative writing community for a while. Circa 2021\22. AI wasn't why I was there but I demo'd a few LLMs to a lot of the users in the Off Topic section because people were curious. Even with an explanation of how they operated, almost everyone was at least interested. One author told me how he operated similarly, rote learning how to write like his favorite authors by copying out their texts, hand written, word for word. Their concern was largely that they were too hard to use from a technical perspective.
These people knew I was there to learn, and that I was unlikely to ever try and publish LLM derived content. I said as much often.
Sometime in late 2022, a switch was flipped. And almost all of them started talking about how AI and those who used it were unambiguously evil. They didn't say my name, but they stopped engaging with me. Gradually, they started reposting twitter content from extremely anti AI people. Complained about AI submissions to various publications. Eventually, someone reposted a tweet calling for the death of anyone who used an LLM, with not even a single disagreement (and lots of encouragement)
I just bailed. I had only ever engaged positively, answered questions for the curious and tried to help people out. I posted one AI assisted story, and that was to demonstrate how my contributions were tracked vs AI contributions automatically in the editor to satisfy someones curiosity. Clearly highlighting the bits I had written. Just a technical demo. No one was asked to enjoy or positively engage with it as if it was human written.
A while later, most of their submission rules were updated with a new clause, if it was judged that AI written content was discovered, they would blacklist that person from all submissions across their entire community. Considering I had demo'd LLMs, and the uselessness of AI detectors, it was clear to me that these people would be able to justify blacklisting me if I poked my head up at all. I had been developing my own story for submission (myself, no LLM content), but I just dropped it. I just didn't feel like sticking my neck out for the witch hunt.
I also used to be quite engaged with blockchain. And it went through a similar process, most people ignored it until that paper about the power usage (Claiming it would spike to some level it never reached) and then suddenly being associated with it was an outrageous moral crime. But after a while, when it turned out that the power use claims were largely a nothing burger, people gave up on the hate parade.
I don't think you will "Lose the battle" (at least in terms of keeping AI users out). And its always ok for small communities to be selective about their membership. I just don't think its possible to maintain such artificial rage for more than a few years. The AI Datacenter water/power claims are a clear London Horse Manure problem that looks set to resolve itself, and the copyright issues will get sorted to some degree. Eventually I think you just wont care enough to ban anyone except low effort spammers (of which there are a huge amount, granted).
YMMV
by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 5:59:11 AM
Have you considered the possibility that most non-programmer people mostly experienced the negative effects?Blockchain turned out to be an absolutely awful payment method, so most people only know it as 1) a way to do crimes like ransomware, 2) a get-rich-quick scam, 3) some buzzword companies threw in everything, 4) the thing that made GPUs unaffordable.
AI is now the thing that 1) is drowning the internet in slop, 2) companies throw into everything - to the point of making apps unusable, 3) makes most computer parts unaffordable. And what they get in return is... a kinda okay-ish Google? A homework plagiarism machine?
Their opinion about AI or blockchain most likely has absolutely nothing to do with you. They are just seeing the world noticeably get worse, and are desperately trying to protect their communities from it in any way they can.
by crote
5/8/2026 at 6:33:23 AM
>Their opinion about AI or blockchain most likely has absolutely nothing to do with you.Which is why I left before I was banned. I no longer felt comfortable and they probably likewise. They wanted a safe space to hate on people involved in AI art and my leaving contributed to that. That said, I doubt I could have posted content calling for the death of authors or honestly any other group in that space without being ostracised.
Its a bit like saying "A witch might have burned down their house, so their reaction against witches is understandable" maybe in abstract. But that doesn't mean the subsequent actions are acceptable.
> Have you considered the possibility that most non-programmer people mostly experienced the negative effects?
Yeah absolutely. These people in particular, at the time, really on experienced it through 2 factors:
1. They (like many people) posted a lot of their midjourney creations for a few months. (21/22 was like that)
2. They saw an increase in low quality submissions.
So gripes about AI art and low quality submissions seem perfectly valid.
>Blockchain turned out to be an absolutely awful payment method >AI is now the thing that 1) is drowning the internet in slop, 2) companies throw into everything - to the point of making apps unusable, 3) makes most computer parts unaffordable. And what they get in return is... a kinda okay-ish Google? A homework plagiarism machine?
Yeah so I am not complaining about people having negative opinions, I was sort of talking about the over meme, the zeitgeist switch where suddenly the entire conversation goes from pros/cons to what appears to be a standard, negative message that everyone absorbed in a short time. Basically used like a thought terminating cliche. I have problems with crypto, and I like things about crypto. I can have a great conversation with most people, but for 12 months or so, you couldn't have a conversation without people loudly shouting about how the power use was going to destroy the environment and that it was going to use X% of the power by Y date. They didn't want to talk about it, they had been given evidence that the discussion was over and everything was solved in favor of their beliefs. The AI debate has now roughly arrived in the same place, there's no longer really a discussion, but the zeitgeist has this one single mode that's constantly debated. To the point where you could be running a local LLM trained only on data from the 1800s and you can still be considered to be responsible for some data centre single handedly draining a lake.
My point is, like crypto, this fixed idea will eventually erode and the hate train will move on. People with well thought out negative opinions are still going to exist past that time, they just wont have people screaming at fever pitch about it constantly.
by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 7:24:35 AM
You didn’t like the broader consensus views towards llm usage but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t ultimately a positive to their community that you left. It sounds as though there was a mismatch in what you and the broader group wanted so perhaps a non-confrontational split is the best that could be hoped for in this situation?by iNerdier
5/10/2026 at 11:32:01 PM
>You didn’t like the broader consensus views towards llm usage but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t ultimately a positive to their community that you left. It sounds as though there was a mismatch in what you and the broader group wanted so perhaps a non-confrontational split is the best that could be hoped for in this situation?I didnt enjoy that sentiment shifted so rapidly that people were openly discussing murder without pushback. I had a hard time reconciling being there as an open LLM user while they were doing their 5 minutes of hate or whatever.
I am in another space where there's a lot of discussion about AI, and I sit generally between the haters, the people that dont care, and the guy who thinks that its literally unstoppable and everything is going to be amazing etc. I argue politely with all of them.
by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 10:00:13 AM
> They wanted a safe space to hate on people involved in AI art and my leaving contributed to that.Once again, I have to ask, why do you think that that is what they want? Maybe they want human generated content?
> the zeitgeist switch where suddenly the entire conversation goes from pros/cons to what appears to be a standard, negative message that everyone absorbed in a short time.
Understandable, though. Why discuss the pros and cons of $FOO when you're drowning in it? All you want it to stop the drowning.
by lelanthran
5/8/2026 at 9:58:04 AM
> I just don't think its possible to maintain such artificial rage for more than a few years.What makes you think the rage is artificial?
by lelanthran
5/10/2026 at 11:37:12 PM
What makes you think the rage is sustainable?My first clue is my memory of blockchain as I mentioned.
My biggest clue however is that it appears to be a London Horse Manure sort of problem. People stopped hating horses when London didnt end up covered under 20M of Horse Manure.
I know there are multiple angles to AI, and people ardently against AI tend to have multiple sets of goal posts prepositioned for switching, but ultimately they tend to come back to the ecological/electrical issues. Those issues are based on projections that rely on speculation that relies on OpenAI/Anthropic/Azure/Amazon plans being fulfilled perfectly + a continuation in that mode. We are already seeing these plans fall over and investment going elsewhere. It will be difficult to maintain the narrative that AI Compute is a direct risk to the environment as the projects dry up.
by protocolture
5/11/2026 at 7:11:29 AM
> What makes you think the rage is sustainable?Where did I imply that the rage is sustainable? I asked why you consider it "artificial", cos it looks damn real to me.
by lelanthran
5/8/2026 at 1:46:22 PM
Yeah I’ve seen similar anti-AI-gen witch hunts crop up over the past few years - in artist and even non-creative communities, and it’s such a disappointment every time. My respect for people who engage in moral panic absolutely plummets, it’s cringe and I wish there was something I could do about it, but it take so much work to try to deprogram someone who’s been demagogued.As you say, unfortunately, sometimes the best thing to do is to just wait it out, and hope that shouting into the echo chamber is all they end up actually doing about the ‘problem.’
by mock-possum
5/8/2026 at 2:00:19 PM
I don't know why not wanting AI-generated content to swamp communities is a moral panic that people need to be deprogrammed from. Seems like a legitimate concern.by goatlover
5/9/2026 at 4:37:26 AM
I think GP was more talking about using anti AI as a cloak to justify moral outrage and witch-hunting rather than actual AI generated content.by Atotalnoob
5/8/2026 at 5:37:03 AM
Genuinely dont know how this made at least 3 people angry enough to downvote but not suggest why.by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 6:26:42 AM
I'm not angry, you just seem to be taking a very self-centered view on the general vibe in this specific forum you mentioned, and are interpreting general anti-AI/blockchain sentiment as personal attacks.So I downvoted.
by tovej
5/8/2026 at 6:40:27 AM
Its more like, here are the decisions I made while being in the position of being on the outside of sentiment, and the timeline of that changing sentiment.The only thing I really took personally was the call for death, and that was me making a decision to leave in favor of my mental health.
by protocolture
5/8/2026 at 1:55:34 PM
I saw your genuine post and upvoted since it seemed unfair.I am mostly against all usage of LLM because the treadmill is moving too fast. But if it's thoughtful usage and a lot of tinkering I might change course. As such that includes other things than LLM obviously.
by isodude
5/7/2026 at 11:41:41 PM
You're a victim of the uni-causeby woah
5/8/2026 at 3:06:11 AM
This is entirely vibes based on reading research on similar campaigns so I cant pull a paper with hard evidence about this specifically. But I believe chinese/North Korean infowar campaigns are behind these seeded talking points. They seed in these far left activist communities and then once they find one that sticks the real people in these communities start carrying the message out to other communities and then the CN/NK botnets amplify the messages and suppress the responses. They dont just do this on the left im just highlight left for this specific point.by AuthAuth
5/8/2026 at 6:31:32 AM
Yeah, that's not it. China is heavily invested in AI and LLMs. Also this sentiment is organic, most people I talk yo about AI are anti-AI.The exceptions to the anti-AI sentiment are management and people with a vested interest.
by tovej
5/8/2026 at 4:11:24 PM
[dead]by redsocksfan45
5/8/2026 at 11:56:14 AM
I may have a solution for you and could use some beta testers. Please reach out to me if you don't mind. Info on my profile.by figassis
5/8/2026 at 1:07:37 PM
It seems this is getting downvoted, no promotion. Understood, thanks for the reminder.by figassis
5/8/2026 at 6:14:38 AM
The battle is lost. You never had a chance. There's nothing you can do against the constant torrent of AI content that's only getting started. The online communities that we know and love are going to change and there's nothing we can do about it. You can't keep AI out of any platform no matter what the community guidelines say or even if it seems locked down with no bot access.The only solution is in person meetups, bringing back the 3rd places, joining a club. Maybe it's not such a bad outcome.
by magic_hamster