futureinevitability
AI Slop Is People Slop in Technicolor
LinkedIn NPC insights existed long before GPT. Most people always did median work, held median opinions, and were unaware of the fact. AI didn't create slop — it made it visible.
futureinevitability
LinkedIn NPC insights existed long before GPT. Most people always did median work, held median opinions, and were unaware of the fact. AI didn't create slop — it made it visible.
futureinevitability
Low agreeableness won't accept mediocre outputs. High openness finds novel applications. This personality combo is disproportionately built for the AI moment.
futureinevitability
When the world reshuffles faster than mental models can update, one Big Five trait consistently sees what others miss. Openness isn't a preference — it's a navigational advantage.
futureinevitability
High-agreeableness people don't just accept slop from AI — they invite it. They don't push back, don't challenge the first draft, and get exactly the frictionless mediocrity they didn't refuse.
futureinevitability
Neuroticism's threat-detection hardware was built for a world with occasional real dangers. AI now generates infinite plausible catastrophes on request. The anxiety math gets ugly fast.
futureinevitability
Conscientiousness was the Big Five personality trait that reliably predicted success. AI just automated everything it was good at — and the identity crisis is only starting.
futureinevitability
Personality traits are stable. Their competitive value isn't. The AI reshuffle is repricing every Big Five dimension — some go up, some crater, none stay neutral.
futureinevitability
Same parable, bigger problem: the elephant is now a 747 containing the entire corpus of human knowledge. Perspective limits didn't disappear — they just got much harder to see.
futureinevitability
For the first time, people can get everything out without judgment and without limits. The problem: unlimited validation removes the incentive to tolerate human friction.
futureinevitability
One unhinged billionaire controls space wifi, rockets, electricity, and the public square. Another quietly owns your data and skyline. Meanwhile senators are asking about their Facebooks.
futureinevitability
They destabilized countries for fun, spent billions on Baghdad, and still can't keep fentanyl out of Ohio. This is government. It always was.
futureinevitability
These weren't aberrations. They were systems, and humans build them repeatedly. Milgram, Arendt, and Nietzsche on why evil is often competent.