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Thursday 04 June 2026 5:01 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 03 June 2026 4:14 pm

There should have been an op-ed here but you filed AI slop

By: Anna Moloney

Deputy Comment and Features Editor

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Writer working diligently at a desk, surrounded by notes and a laptop, focused on creating content for a news article.

CityAM’s inbox is drowning in AI-written pitches. Anna Moloney, who now spends her days copy and pasting them into detection software, has had enough

In this slot there should have been an op-ed. A punchy one from a high-flying lawyer on the ever raging debate around inheritance tax, perfectly attuned to the interests of CityAM readers. However, as is now happening at an alarming regularity, what said lawyer filed was not an insightful piece drawing on their many years of experience and expertise, but 600 words of AI-generated slop. 

I will not name, but I will shame. 

Unfortunately, this is no longer a rare occurrence. In the last few weeks, running copy filed by those I thought were reputable contacts through AI detection software has become a core, and unloved, part of my job. This week alone, I have gone back to three ‘writers’ asking why their copy has been flagged as 100 per cent AI-generated with high confidence, per our software’s rating. Some feign shock – “how strange!” – though most, I’ve been surprised, fess up immediately, usually with caveats they think absolve them. 

They “just” used it to edit down a piece to the word count. They “only” used it to “refine” a draft. They “don’t know” if their client used AI to write the piece, but “rest assured” they edited it afterwards. In one case, I received a follow up, saying they were very disappointed to see the piece hadn’t run, and that “it would be a shame for it to go to waste”. 

Call me selfish, but I find myself far more concerned with the waste of my own time in these scenarios.

At a newspaper, we run things to tight deadlines. When we’ve saved a slot – such as this – for a promised piece, which then turns out to be AI-written, we are left with a hole. This is not a new problem. Writers since time immemorial have filed late, badly, or not at all. Usually in this scenario, my colleagues and I would look for someone to quickly fill the breach – as we have many talented columnists who are able to turn around sharp copy at short notice without the assistance of AI. Needless to say, this is a skill that anyone who wants to write in newspapers, or those tasked to on others’ behalf, reasonably requires. If you are unable to do that, you may need to get out of the game.

In my favourite defence of an AI submission, I was told that “the original thoughts and opinions of the piece” were the writer’s, but “the support of AI was used to help structure and organise his original thoughts into a draft format”. Tell us if we’re wrong, but at CityAM we call that process writing. And we’re actually rather keen on it.

AI detectors are not infallible (though I should mention we use a good one, one that seems particularly skilled in picking up copy that has been prompted to be as ‘undetectable as AI’ as possible). But there are always tells that lead us to putting it through the detector in the first place. For me, it’s less the em dashes than just the banal genericism. The feeling that anyone could have written this, because anybody could have. 

The truth is simple, if you can’t be bothered to write it, why should anyone be bothered to read it? It’s insulting but, more than that, it’s depressing. Writing, especially in opinion, is about individual voice: how you turn a phrase, the anecdote only you can tell, that odd word you might have picked up from a well-loved novel. 

If you think you can fool us, I’d urge you to think longer-term, not just for us but yourself. Not only are there material costs – we are extremely unlikely to trust you enough to commission you again – but ethical ones. Trust in the media is already at an all-time low; making it a dumping ground for your Claude castoffs is unlikely to help.

In his now much-quoted encyclical about protecting humanity in the age of AI, Pope Leo XIV has warned we are at risk of constructing a new Tower of Babel with the pervasive use of LLMs. At CityAM, we’ll put it more simply: just stop the slop – please!

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