Cambridge Dictionary includes ‘Slop’ as the low-quality content generated by AI - EducationTimes.com | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it
Since April 2024, the word slop has gained traction online, with online searches for the term AI slop increasing dramatically - EducationTimes.com

"Cambridge Dictionary Includes ‘Slop’ As The Low-Quality Content Generated By AI


Cambridge Dictionary includes ‘Slop’ as the low-quality content generated by AI


Since April 2024, the word slop has gained traction online, with online searches for the term AI slop increasing dramatically


 


TNN | Posted June 24, 2025 05:19 PM


 


 As a new Artificial Intelligence-related definition of the word slop enters the Cambridge Dictionary, language experts are tracking emerging Artificial Intelligence (AI) terms. Traditionally used as the word to define liquid or wet food waste, especially when it is fed to animals, slop has found new meaning due to the rapid rise of AI. As per the newly added definition, slop refers to content on the internet that is of very low quality, especially when it is created by artificial intelligence.


 


 


Since April 2024, slop has gained traction online, with online searches for the term AI slop increasing dramatically and continuing to grow.


 


Colin McIntosh, programme manager, Cambridge Dictionary, said, “The updated entry reflects growing concerns about increasing amounts of low-quality content created by AI. It is an important reminder that quality and integrity remain unmistakably human. In an era of machine-made content, those values are more crucial than ever.”


 


Wendalyn Nichols, publishing manager, Cambridge Dictionary, said, “Think of email in the 90s or hashtag in the 2000s. Now, AI-related words are becoming increasingly part of our everyday lives. It is our job to track terms used in popular culture and add the ones that are likely to have staying power to the Dictionary.”


 


Emerging new AI words  


 


Other new words about AI identified by lexicographers at the Cambridge Dictionary reflect the evolving English language as technology continues to re-shape our world. Terms such as AI washing, the behaviour of a company or organisation that tries to make people believe that it is using AI to make its products or services better, when really it is not doing this or is only partly doing it; and decel, someone who believes that AI and other new technologies are developing so quickly that they are likely to cause very serious problems and that progress should be deliberately slowed down, are being monitored for possible inclusion in the Cambridge Dictionary.


 


Other AI terms which are being monitored by Cambridge Dictionary lexicographers include Neocloud, a noun, which is used to refer to a start-up that specialises in AI-based cloud computing. Meta face, noun, which refers to a trend where photos that have been enhanced using AI technology make everyone look similarly flawless and unrealistically beautiful.


 


The lexicographers are also monitoring abbreviations such as BYOAI, which is an abbreviation for “bring your own artificial intelligence”: the practice of companies saying that employees can use their own artificial intelligence tools when at work. E/acc is a noun and an abbreviation for “effective accelerationism”: a movement that believes AI and other new technologies should be allowed to develop as quickly as possible without any restrictions.


 


Some other terms include Artificial superintelligence, a noun, which is used to define a type of artificial intelligence that is much more intelligent than any human and can think, act, learn, etc., independently and beyond the abilities of people. Agentic AI, noun, a term used to describe a type of artificial intelligence that can make decisions and take actions without the need for human input. Intention economy, noun, which is used to refer to a system in which AI learns what people are likely to want to buy or do in the future, with companies using the information to create corresponding products and services."


https://www.educationtimes.com/article/newsroom/99738869/cambridge-dictionary-includes-slop-as-the-low-quality-content-generated-by-ai


#metaglossia_mundus