Hating AI is good, actually

LinkedIn may be awash with boosters, but shunning AI is the human choice.

[Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt while being booed]

Jonah Peretti is very lucky. Buzzfeed—the viral media company he founded 20 years ago and was once valued at $1.6 billion—was running out of cash when billionaire Byron Allen agreed to buy 52% of its shares. At the same time this new partnership was revealed, Peretti announced he’d be stepping down as CEO of Buzzfeed to serve in a new role as President of Buzzfeed AI. So Allen will continue to bankroll the former media titan’s obsession, as he promises (without evidence) that AI will right the ship. Lucky, to be sure, but also part of the mass delusion that AI is not just worth our money, but owed our respect. 

Lately I’ve felt myself rapidly radicalizing into what I can only call an anti-AI evangelist. I’ve never been quiet about my feelings on the subject—I even wrote a screed about it last month—but as more and more examples show how easily it can be used unethically, I’m not just skeptical. I'm against it. 

I wouldn’t call this a particularly bold stance, given the front page of today’s Wall Street Journal declares an “AI Rebellion,” noting that public opinion on the subject is souring “at breakneck speed.” What is novel, I think, is recognizing that people who loathe AI and the way it’s being foisted upon society are an actual constituency to be taken seriously. I figure that if billionaires and brands are going to try to beat us into AI submission, it’s only fair we get to take a few swings. We’re told that if we don’t use AI then we’ll get left behind, but what if we’d like to leave the AI boosters behind instead? It’s time to give a voice to those who don’t view AI as an inevitability but a liability. 

Now is our time. 

The soundtrack of the past week or so has been the boos of graduating college students as out-of-touch adults try to tell them that they need to embrace AI or else. Perhaps most prominent were the boos of University of Arizona graduates as ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt told them, “The question is not whether AI will shape the world. It will. The question is whether you will help shape artificial intelligence.” 

These grads, according to Schmidt, have no agency, which was confirmed by this comment a few minutes later: “When someone offers you a seat on the rocket ship, you do not ask which seat. You just get on, Graduates, the rocket ship is here.” What Schmidt doesn’t get is that these young people have already been forced onto the ship and there aren’t enough seats.

A few days before Schmidt, record company CEO Scott Borchetta took the stage at Middle Tennessee State University’s commencement to extoll the virtues of AI. When the students, whose job prospects have shrunken significantly because of the AI bubble, booed Borchetta, he shot back: “Deal with it. Like I said, it’s a tool.”

Sage words from a man reportedly worth $450 million.

It may seem callous for a commencement speaker to respond to graduates’ existential dread with “deal with it,” but billionaires and tech companies have been feeding us this message for a while now. You may not like AI, they preach, but because of choices we are making for you, life will be increasingly unlivable without it. Yet while they try to force-feed us this bleakly inevitable future, actually existing AI keeps making the humans who use it look like idiots.

On Tuesday, the New York Times reported on a new book called “The Future of Truth: How AI Reshapes Reality,” by media executive Steven Rosenbaum. He readily copped to having “used AI tools ChatGPT and Claude during the research, writing and editing process.” But he didn’t disclose—likely because he didn’t realize it!— that his book contained misattributed or completely fabricated quotes created by those very tools. Only when reporters began to question the quotes did Rosenbaum promise to “investigate” how they’d been included. 

But Rosenbaum was unrepentant. He told the Times that if this debacle “serves as a warning about the risks of AI-assisted research and verification, that is why I wrote the book.” And he went on to say: “These AI errors do not, in fact, diminish the larger questions that the book raises about truth, trust and AI and its impact on society, democracy and editorial.”

Ronsebaum’s big whoopsie is certainly a warning, but not in the way he thinks. He himself is the warning; a cautionary tale about relying so heavily on a flawed technology that it completely undermines your legitimacy. The errors may not diminish some of the book’s larger questions, but they diminish the value of the book itself. If you can’t make the effort to verify the contents of your book, then why should anyone make an effort to read it?

Two other literary AI-crises unfolded Tuesday. Coincidence? Perhaps. But also potentially a sign that AI use has reached the critical mass billionaires hoped for. Only, instead of making things better, it’s just made them stupider. 

One of the crises involved the Commonwealth Short Story Prize, a prestigious annual fiction award, and the winning stories. When this year’s winners were published online by UK-based literary magazine Granta, one immediately aroused suspicion that it was partly AI-generated. Some, perhaps to sardonically prove a point, ran it through AI that claims to detect the presence of AI. Later, Granta’s publisher admitted to doing the same thing. “We showed Claude.ai the story and asked whether it was AI-generated,” the statement reads. “The response was long, concluding that it was ‘almost certainly not produced unaided by a human’.”

But the use of AI on AI only caused more confusion. “It may be that the judges have now awarded a prize to an instance of AI plagiarism – we don’t yet know, and perhaps we never will know,” the publisher wrote. For a well-respected publisher to simply throw up its hands and say “perhaps we never will know,” deeply rankled some human writers, to say the least. 

The other scandal surrounded Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk’s admission that she used AI in her writing process, clarifying that she uses “artificial intelligence on the same principles as most people in the world – I treat it as a tool that allows faster documenting and checking of facts.” The casualness with which she mentioned it during an earlier interview indicated she wasn’t particularly tortured about using it. 

“Often I just ask the machine, ‘darling, how could we develop this beautifully?’” Tokarczuk reportedly said, per a translation from Polish. “Even though I know about hallucinations and many factual errors in the algorithms in terms of economics and hard data, I have to add that in literary fiction this technology is an advantage of unbelievable proportion.” 

This brings up the idea I’ve seen pushed by other writers who openly used AI and say this technology is merely like a sourdough starter, creating the conditions for something to be made where there was once nothing. The problem arises when you don’t know where the starter ends and the creative process begins. And can anything truly novel be created by a technology that feeds on what already exists?

[Image from a 2025 Nature magazine study that was retracted in part because of this “AI-generated figure containing nonsense to demonstrate the framework.”]

To understand the crusade for, and increasingly against, AI, one must regrettably log into LinkedIn. Originally known as a social media platform for job searching and professional networking, it’s morphed primarily into a place where tech evangelists assert supremacy by loudly and frequently listing out the ways they harness technology to achieve peak performance. None of the posts read like something an actual human would say, and I would guess the people posting this shit don’t talk like that in real life. But it’s not real life. It’s LinkedIn. A haven for sycophants to gain validation for their originality all while saying the same things as everyone else. Typically I scroll through for amusement, and sometimes post to promote my 100% human-made work.

While LinkedIn may seem like an impenetrable space for AI skeptics and outright haters like me, my passive scrolling has somewhat confirmed what the WSJ labeled a “rebellion.” One trend I noticed a month or two back is that marketing professionals, TED talkers and communications gurus alike have started calling out what they see as easy tells for AI-generated writing. 

At first, I took it as a hopeful sign that AI use wasn’t going completely unchecked. After all, according to a Pew study from September, “U.S. adults are generally pessimistic about AI’s effect on people’s ability to think creatively and form meaningful relationships,” with 53% saying AI will make it worse, and 16% saying it will both of those things better. But after reading enough of these posts, I came to realize people on LinkedIn weren’t mad others were using AI; they were mad people were being so sloppy about it, not even bothering to massage the machine’s language to conceal their process.

And of course with most trends, there’s a backlash to people calling out AI. One defender called the popular groundswell against AI slop “the new McCarthyism.” Some of these posts about AI policing are imbued with a sense of outright betrayal. How dare you draw attention to an unethical shortcut that we all use, even if some of us are better at using it than others. How dare you let people see your writing is actually just two LLMs in a trench coat. Again they’re not mad that people use it: they’re mad that people are catching on.

But while I took mental notes on what I was observing, I also felt a lack of representation for true, profound, and guttural loathing of AI. The people like me who have only the vaguest idea of what defines AI, but extremely specific examples of why it sucks. I’m not a hater based on vibes. I’m a hater based on facts. And those facts deserve as much respect as the billionaires who continue to dump money into losing enterprises.

Just ask Pizza Hut

[My new and improved LinkedIn header]

A not-insignificant part of my frustration with the AI ethos saturating LinkedIn is that it increasingly serves only one, narrow vision of success. It’s the success that comes only to the organized, the efficient and the hyper-optimized. And above all, to the deeply certain.

But as someone who’s built a business myself, the one thing I can be certain about is that there is absolutely another way. You don’t have to be part of the grindset or be a girlboss or a sociopath or use shortcuts to be successful. You don’t have to outsource thinking to a machine to demonstrate you understand the future. You will only be and do those things if what you’re actually seeking is power. 

“People hate AI,” the CEO of an AI-infrastructure consulting firm said on a podcast, per the Wall Street Journal. “AI is less popular than ICE. AI is less popular than politicians.” And much like ICE, AI has sunk its claws into communities that don’t want it. 

Despite the braying of the tech elite, we still have agency. We still have a choice.  Players with many billions at stake have a vested interest in removing your agency, and reclaiming it hurts their bottom line. There’s no way to say for certain who will be right about AI in the end, but the current evidence points towards disaster. And it’s safe to acknowledge it.

This story was edited by Jesse Hicks.

Reply

or to participate.
The user involved in the comment

waffle tower • 11 minutes ago

You would label me an AI Booster, I imagine, and I despise Linkedin. Linkedin is an incredibly warped lens upon the world of AI -- akin to performing astronomy with a Reynolds Wrap telescope. There are many other lenses to consider: ArXiv, Hacker News, Wall Street Journal, Axios...

The user involved in the comment

Scott Meyers • 1 hour ago

Thank you again for an incredibly insightful,engaging and unique perspective.AI is definitely something we should all be taking a deep dive into.I have been more on board given that I’m in the health care business and see the multi-faceted values of research and anatomy.But I appreciate the skepticism and you once again have made me probe my thoughts in new ways.Thank you for your beautiful writing.Scott.

The user involved in the comment

Katarina Braun • 7 hours ago

I'm a technophile who's been using computers since 1981. I was very interested in generative AI when ChatGPT was opened to the public. I've been trying it ever since, and have yet to find a serious use for it. It does well when searching for very specific info, but even then one must make sure to check its sources and/or answers. I've tried it for work, and that resulted in doing more work to correct its mistakes and shortcomings than if I'd done the work myself. 
 
That's about it. I also play with image generation. It's fun, but it's not serious work. There are other fun activities all over the place, from books to streaming to games. 
 
So, call me an AI skeptic. It may develop into something genuinely useful for everyday life one day, but right now it's a half-baked, unreliable product. The oceans of money invested on it, and the attempts to place it on everything and encourage its use, are not justified by its current capabilities.

The user involved in the comment

Urbie Watrous • 7 hours ago

I’m a skeptic/ hater, too (see below); but I have found one really good use case: translation. My grandfather died in 1946, leaving behind a series of memoirs, which were published in a Lithuanian-language newspaper in the ‘30s. My Mom had always meant to translate them, but her Lithuanian was rusty and she never did. So I have them - and thanks to good scanning/OCR software and a chatbot, my grandfather has come alive, after all this time! But that is the only really good use case I’ve found - I do use it a lot for search, but the thing is so laughably unable to give reliable answers to simple questions, that… all I can do is shake my head.

The user involved in the comment

Katarina Braun • 6 hours ago

Hey that's great! If limited. I've seen online demos, usually in Youtube videos, of AI real time translation for phone calls and chats. It looks great, even with a short lag between input and output, but I've never been able to see whether the translations are accurate or not. I've no reason to believe they're not, nor any reason to believe they are.  
 
I found some use in search for specifics. Say if I ask what the time dilation is for a ship moving at 0.5c relative to Earth. That led me to a website with physics calculators, one of which calculates time dilation from relative speeds. But that's not exactly an everyday matter for most people. And it required checking its sources.

The user involved in the comment

Urbie Watrous • 10 hours ago

BIngo! Suprised you didn't mention Ed Zitron, though -- his "Where's Your Ed At" demolitions of AI are a balm for the soul of an AI hater. A little scary, though, the way he systematically evaluates the AI bubble and its possible effects on the economy when it finally pops. (I tend to think it won't be too bad. but if the borrowing and overextending go on too long, it could be....)

The user involved in the comment

Ellie M • 12 hours ago

Marisa, you just got a fan for life. As a writer, a mother, a person who lives in the world, I hate AI with every fibre of my being. It threatens everything I care about. To anyone who thinks we're being left behind - yeah, leave! Get on your rocketship and go. Let us have our running water, our creativity, our relationships with other souls. 
 
Thank you for being loud and livid <3 keep going.

The user involved in the comment

Mary Bees • 15 hours ago

I have never had a desire to use AI and I will be sticking to that. I totally support you.

The user involved in the comment

Michael Golden • 17 hours ago

Brilliant, Marisa! We should have a conversation about it sometime in Recording Studio. Sounds like we're on the same wavelength. :) MG michaelgolden1@mac.com

The user involved in the comment

Anne M • 19 hours ago

I agree, and I think it’s also critically important to loathe those, like Mr. Schmidt, who refuse to acknowledge or empathize with the human beings who face potentially disastrous results.  
 
No billionaire is investing in AI so they can reduce the tedium of employee workloads and give employees four-day workweeks. They’re not building robots so we can all have better lives. These are, by definition, not people who will share the wealth.  
 
It’s all about laying off workers and re-creating serfdom. I hate AI and the sociopaths who keep trying to get us aboard the rocket ship to nowhere.

The user involved in the comment

Douglas Allen • 9 hours ago

The rocket ship to nowhere sums it up for me. Well-said.

The user involved in the comment

Alex Katsanos • 19 hours ago

AI for protein folding, weather pattern recognition and forecasting are good uses for AI. But anything that intersects with the pure creativity of humans is shaky ground. I feel like reading only books written before say 2021 as the chances of it being aided by AI are very slim.

The user involved in the comment

carolyn weaver • 20 hours ago

Generative AI (for creating writing and images) is an abomination.  
Analytic AI (e.g. for data crunching, medical science) is a boon, though one must also approach it there with skepticism; AI sometimes invents whole-cloth sources and citations.

The user involved in the comment

Marie Johnson • 20 hours ago

Going to add A.I. hater to all my profiles.

The user involved in the comment

Ryan S • 21 hours ago

Terminator was much too formative in my youth to be willing to help the skynets by using AI and training it for them.

The user involved in the comment

Sharlene McLean • 12 hours ago

For me it was 2001: A Space Odyssey - I refuse to train a system that might one day try to kill me. Everytime I read a piece in which someone extolls the virtues of AI I can only think that they need to watch it and other early '70s post-apocalyptic movies.

The user involved in the comment

Al Harder-Hyde • 22 hours ago

What confuses me the most about the AI graduation speeches is graduation speeches are like hey you did it! Congrats! Not pitching kids on some bullshit. 
 
I write copy and it's true AI can do it but also the time it takes me to edit the copy into something usable, it's faster for me to just write it from scratch. Also an issue in my job is like data privacy especially if you're working with like 3rd party information (i.e. pricing) and like no one is cool if you randomly give away their proprietary info. 
 
That being said someone said it below there are good uses usually for very specific analysis of like data crunching but also none of that is what people are talking about when it comes to AI. (A YouTuber I like did a lot of linguistic analysis and used AI for it and I feel bad that he got piled on it for it, cause like yeah that's the use case).

The user involved in the comment

Beverly D • 22 hours ago

I work in the accounting field, and our small boutique firm was recently acquired by someone who is super gung-ho about AI. We had an introductory seminar on it, yesterday. 
 
I concede, if it does all the things it promises it's going to do, it would relieve staff of some of the more tedious tasks, AND prevent tasks and clients from falling in between the cracks. 
 
Notice I said, IF. Because for all the rainbows and ponies they were pitching to us, it is NOT actually functional yet. Most of the features they touted won't happen until "this summer," or in a few cases, Q4 of this year. So, oh joy, we get to be the lab rats, beta-testing the not-ready-for-primetime software.  
 
How many trees will die, and water resources befouled, for something that is not yet working, may NEVER work the way they want it to? I am furious, but hope to be pleasantly surprised.

The user involved in the comment

Urbie Watrous • 10 hours ago

People are using ChatGPT to do their taxes. Which, as a former tax preparer, is OK with me -- it's good for business! If you thought TurboTax Syndrome™ was bad, this is exponentially worse.

The user involved in the comment

Edward Ericson • 22 hours ago

Hear! Hear! 
 
And this bit: "it increasingly serves only one, narrow vision of success. It’s the success that comes only to the organized, the efficient and the hyper-optimized. And above all, to the deeply certain." It's been the case for decades. It's half of the "success" double helix, the other half being "Fake It Til You Make It." 
 
It's why our socio-economic environment is a metastasized cancer on the body of our culture. 
 
So: thanks.

The user involved in the comment

Yin Wong • 23 hours ago

Environmental disaster is top of mind. The amount of water (already a limited resource) and power consumption is not sustainable.

The user involved in the comment

Anshu Sharma • 23 hours ago

The user involved in the comment

Marisa Kabas • 23 hours ago

fixed, thanks!

The user involved in the comment

Jim Caserta • 1 day ago

If the seat on the rocket is underneath it where I will be burned up by its exhaust, no, Eric, I will not take that seat.

The user involved in the comment

mike bayer • 1 day ago

perhaps the widespread examples of AI being used to generate garbage slop, career-ending legal documents, plagarized news articles, books with hallucinated quotes, and all the other horror stories outlined in this post, contrasted to all of us in science and technology who are having much better lives because we now have a robot assistant to help us with our often very tedious and rote work (where you are not, at least yet, hearing any large number of these embarrassing horror stories, indeed all the platforms we use to communicate on the internet including Bluesky etc. are developed and maintained by programmers making widespread use of LLMs like Claude), really says more about the quality / character / specific jobs and skills of the people using it than the AI itself.

The user involved in the comment

Gully Burns • 1 day ago

Kinda scared to comment, given the sheer animus toward the field that I work in. Have you seen the way that AI is being used in science? Alphafold being the most famous example of a previously intractable problem that can now be addressed.  
 
I build curation tools that for scientific knowledge. The idea is that you use AI to help organize and help make sense of complex information. You don’t rely on the factuality of the AI generated text itself but if you supply it the right context, it can help make sense and organize data very well. I feel strongly that the tools can be used to make the world better. It’s not all slop and garbage.  
 
Sure - there are plenty of places where the widespread use of AI is noticeably awful. Rachel Thomas has been calling out real horror stories (https://rachel.fast.ai/) well before the current seismic societal changes.  
 
Anyway, I appreciate you calling out of the negative aspects of how AI is being misused - we should (and must) do better.

The user involved in the comment

John Seal • 16 hours ago

Are you a human or an LLM?

The user involved in the comment

Douglas Allen • 8 hours ago

“I build curation tools that for scientific knowledge.” That what? Part of the problem with AI is as a tool it’s not benign. For example, if the tool is a hammer every problem starts to look like a nail. My father long ago taught me that having the right tool for the job is important, human beings make sense of and organize data every day so I don’t need a demonstrably terrible tool (what if the tool bent every 4th nail or simply pretended to put a nail in?) to help me do it faster with more mistakes.

The user involved in the comment

Mike Farber • 1 day ago

Hard agree. There’s also this tidbit about a college that I guess couldn’t be bothered to have a human check its graduates’ names prior to commencement: 
https://www.businessinsider.com/graduation-ceremony-ai-misses-names-boos-glendale-community-college-2026-5