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Ansem Calls Out AI Replies And The Internet Has Thoughts


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The American actor-cum-crypto-celebrity Ansem, known for his guards-down approach towards controversial topics, has just Tweeted an observation that even some would begrudgingly agree with. His observation was short and simple — talking about the spam on social media that is generated by AI. “These auto AI slop replies make me want to do very bad things,” he wrote, along those lines, with a photo that completely captured the sentiment of being cooped up with bot-like answers. Honestly, in recent months, anyone who has been through comments section must have felt that way at least once.

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The image shown had a bat…and it does track. At times, one just wants to put some power behind the object after witnessing the copy-paste drivel in every single comment box. Ansem’s tweet went really viral, and opinions kept pouring in, ranging from making light of the matter and cracking jokes to having genuine concerns about human interaction in this cyber world.

One user sarcastically went: “AI replies making you homicidal? Sounds like a Tuesday in crypto Twitter.” And honestly, that’s fair. The crypto space itself is chaotic enough without bots adding to the noise. Another user responded in almost a rebuke, saying the bots have made the people “mindless” and that “No one wants to use their own brains to think things anymore and it’s very sad.” Same person was quick to add, “Part of me wants to see the bad things tho 😂😂.” So yeah, there are some mixed feelings.

Some responses got darker. One user detailed how accounts are grown just to be sold later for fake engagement:

“They grow accounts as reply guys and resell them once they have enough following,” he said. If that is true, it is a serious new dimension of manipulation on social media, similar to tactics seen in sports marketing, like Saquon Barkley landing on the Madden 26 cover but fans worrying about the curse. Another post was far more serious: “Imagine this x10,000 done at nation-state level and that’s what US enemies are doing on social media to divide us.”

Some people played the downer, and some others had fun with it. “Like how bad? Eat a whole can of Pringles bad?” was one response, a tease.

Another one responded with, “Bro BLOCK THEM for a sign of rage punch 🥊.” Honestly, that might be good advice. Blocking could be the only way to save your sanity these days.

The funnest part? Somewhere in a thread complaining about AI replies, someone was continuing to shill their crypto projects. “Yo nigga buy PEMDAS say thanks later,” said one response, meaning someone is always willing to put something up for sale no matter the topic. Another chimed in, “Don’t sleep on $Ling it’s the next big thing.” Classic.

Ansem’s post was touched with the growing public frustration with how automated and impersonal interactions on the internet today have become. Whether it’s bots, paid engagement, or just straight-up the same recurring phrases copy-pasted by people, every single day, some kind of act turns these impersonal beings more human. If even crypto Twitter-a place appreciated for its wild energy-is fed up with it all, then you know this going to a mess.

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One frustrating aspect that could calm down was Ansem’s rant-something all of us have tasted in one form or another. The internet in the past was actually weird and unpredictable in a fun way. Presently, if not weird and unpredictable, it’s just blatantly obvious: Why is this bot so eager to convince me to invest in a coin named after an anime character? Perhaps it is about blocking. Or maybe hitting something. Metaphorically speaking.




This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

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