AI Slop Detector Tool Flags Common AI-Style Patterns — Even in Human Writing
A developer on Dev.to tested an open-source tool called kill-ai-slop, which checks writing and code for 23 patterns commonly associated with AI-generated content. The tool, created by GitHub user yetone, works as an agent skill compatible with Claude Code and Cursor, scanning HTML, CSS, and copy for telltale signs of machine-made output. Running the checklist against his own articles, the writer found several flagged patterns, including the sentence structure 'It's not just X — it's Y' appearing in the very first paragraph of his debut post. The tool organises its 23 detectable patterns into six categories — Colour, Type, Copy, Components, Layout, and Evolved Slop — each with a detection method, explanation, and suggested fix. The experiment highlights how certain rhetorical and design habits, even in genuine human writing, can mirror the formulaic style of AI-generated content.
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