Millions Are Using an ‘Addictive’ AI Chatbot That’s Run by Humans

Millions Are Using an ‘Addictive’ AI Chatbot That’s Run by Humans


A month-old website called Your AI Slop Bores Me has become an unlikely hit by humanizing ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini. Users type in a prompt, then another person has 75 seconds to reply while pretending to be a bot. The site was created by 17-year-old Mihir Maroju, who told NPR it has already attracted 25 million unique visitors and nearly 280 million total hits in only a few weeks. “I didn’t really expect it to be so addictive,” he said.

The gimmick is part joke, part backlash. One user asked for a drawing of “a DJ cutting it up in space” and got a sketch made by another human that looks like, well, you decide.

Millions Are Using an ‘Addictive’ AI Chatbot That’s Run by Humans
Your AI Slop Bores Me

The site even also a button labeled “larp as ai,” letting people role-play as the very thing they claim to hate.

For entrepreneurs, the lesson is that AI fatigue may be turning into a business opportunity. More than one-third of U.S. adults have used ChatGPT, yet plenty seem eager for something messier and unmistakably human.

A month-old website called Your AI Slop Bores Me has become an unlikely hit by humanizing ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini. Users type in a prompt, then another person has 75 seconds to reply while pretending to be a bot. The site was created by 17-year-old Mihir Maroju, who told NPR it has already attracted 25 million unique visitors and nearly 280 million total hits in only a few weeks. “I didn’t really expect it to be so addictive,” he said.

The gimmick is part joke, part backlash. One user asked for a drawing of “a DJ cutting it up in space” and got a sketch made by another human that looks like, well, you decide.

Millions Are Using an ‘Addictive’ AI Chatbot That’s Run by Humans
Your AI Slop Bores Me

The site even also a button labeled “larp as ai,” letting people role-play as the very thing they claim to hate.

For entrepreneurs, the lesson is that AI fatigue may be turning into a business opportunity. More than one-third of U.S. adults have used ChatGPT, yet plenty seem eager for something messier and unmistakably human.


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