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How I Find Original, Human Made Content in an AI-Heavy Web

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Something has changed about how we discover information online & if you’re reading this, you probably already feel it.

If you don’t, I’m talking about AI slop.

AI is easily one of the most valuable things that has happened to the internet. It helps us learn faster, work smarter, and solve everyday problems. But like anything powerful, it comes with trade-offs.

The downside? Finding real, human-made content is getting harder every day.

The internet is now flooded with AI-generated posts, videos, and explanations. A lot of it is technically useful but much of it feels artificial like it was written to sound helpful rather than to share a real experience.

The truth is, we can’t completely stop AI slop anymore. But we can stop letting it decide what we read, watch, and trust.

Before jumping into methods or platforms, there’s something more important, learning how to recognize AI-generated content without using any tool at all just by paying attention to a few clear signals.

Once you understand that, I’ll show you exactly how I find real, human-made content on today’s internet.

Phase 1: The “At-a-Glance” Slop Detector

This table is the fastest way to tell what content you’re consuming.
If you remember nothing else from this post, remember this.

SignalAI Slop Real Human
The Vibe“Helpful robot”Opinionated peer
GrammarSmooth“Textured” (slang, emphasis, quirks)
DetailsGeneric and broadHyper-specific and personal
MistakesNever makes themCan be messy or biased
The “I”Used for simulated storiesUsed for staked experiences

AI tries to sound safe.
Humans sound like they actually care.

Phase 2: The Reality Check (Important)

Here’s the important part most people miss, Good writing does not automatically mean AI.

Real creators sometimes write well. Very well.
So instead of judging polish, look for texture.

1. Look for the “Messy” Middle

Real people don’t always follow a perfect intro -> body -> conclusion structure.

  • They go on deviations.
  • They overuse commas.
  • Mostly they start strong & end abruptly because they got tired or distracted.

If a post feels slightly unpolished or uneven, that’s often a good sign. AI is obsessed with symmetry. Humans are not.

2. The “Dave” Test (Personal Artifacts)

AI is not good with real-world specificity. Humans casually mention things like:

  • “My neighbor Dave”
  • “It’s raining in Seattle right now”
  • “I tried this and it feels weird on my PC”

AI avoids consequences. Humans live inside them.

If someone stakes their words to a real place, a real failure, or a real person, you’re likely reading something genuine.

3. Check the “Useless” Words

In 2026, AI loves certain words.

If you keep seeing things like:

  • “tapestry”
  • “realm”
  • “landscape”
  • “underscores the importance of”

you get the signal that its likely AI generated.

Humans use functional words:

  • “this thing”
  • “garbage”
  • “fast”
  • “it broke”
  • “honestly”

Real people don’t optimize their vocabulary. They optimize for getting the point across.

4. Verify the Visuals

AI content loves perfect visuals.

  • Perfect lighting.
  • Generic photos.
  • Clean desks that don’t exist in real life.

A real human uploads:

  • a slightly blurry screenshot
  • a phone photo with shadows
  • a messy desk in the background

Now that you know what to look for as a signal, Now lets explore some platforms that mostly avoids AI Slop for me.

1. Reddit

When I want to escape AI Slop, Reddit is always my first stop.

Its my go to place because real people argue there. You’ll find bad takes, real opinions, solutions, follow-up replies all the things AI tries to avoid.

Instead of scrolling endlessly, I search specific problems directly on Google using:

site:reddit.com + your exact question

I also use this method when I surf Bing. This results in long threads where people explain what worked, what failed, & what they regret trying. If someone says “I tried this and it messed up my setup,” that’s a human signal AI can’t fake well.

2. RSS & Newsletters

RSS feeds and newsletters don’t guess what you want. They show you exactly what you asked for, That’s why whenever i find something useful or something that resonates with my interest , I subscribe to that blog, Substack, or newsletter if available or I simply bookmark it.

Also Read: The Internet Is Quietly Changing and Most People Haven’t Noticed

3. The udm14 Method

Sometimes the problem isn’t what you search for, it’s how Search engines shows results.

Over the years, search has slowly turned into:

  • AI summaries
  • “People also ask” boxes

The &udm=14 parameter is a simple method that makes Google back into its old-school mode, mostly plain links, fewer distractions, and far less AI content.

It doesn’t remove AI Slop, but it reduces the noise and makes real pages easier to find.

How to Use It??

You don’t need any extensions or tools.

  1. Open Google and search for anything as usual
    Example:
    how to start a newsletter
  2. Now, look at the address bar and add this at the end of the URL:
  3. &udm=14
  4. Press Enter and reload the page

You’ll notice:

  • Fewer AI summaries
  • Fewer “special” result boxes
  • More traditional, text-based links

It feels surprisingly familiar, like using Google from years ago.

Make It Permanent

If you use this often, you can turn it into a custom search engine.

In Chrome / Brave / Edge:

  1. Go to browser settings → Search engines
  2. Add a new search engine
  3. Name it something like:
    Google Search (No AI)
  4. Use this URL:
https://www.google.com/search?q=%s&udm=14
  1. Set a shortcut (for example: g14)
  2. Save it

Now, whenever you type g14 in the address bar and search, Google will default to this cleaner mode.

This is not a permanent method. Search engines change constantly. So consider it as temporary solution but if you’re following all the above methods then you’ll mostly recognize & avoid AI Slop & find Human made content.

Also Read: 11 Must-Have Software I Install on Every New PC

Wrapping Up

So yeah, these are the methods I use to avoid AI slop and find content that actually feels human again.It’s not about avoiding AI that’s neither realistic nor necessary. AI is useful, and it’s here to stay. The real problem starts when we consume everything blindly, without knowing what’s real & what’s just noise.

Once you understand the signals, and once you control where and how you discover content, things changeAnd that’s really the goal here. Just adapting, so you can consume what you actually want to consume

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