DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

An Elegant Solution to AI Slop: Tax It, and Use the Resulting Billions of Dollars to Fund Cultural Institutions, Artists, and Researchers

May 3, 2026
in News
An Elegant Solution to AI Slop: Tax It, and Use the Resulting Billions of Dollars to Fund Cultural Institutions, Artists, and Researchers

If you can’t beat ’em, tax ’em.

AI slop is as certain as government levies these days, infecting every corner of the internet and increasingly intruding on real life. It’s not going away, and surely any attempts to ban the stuff will be futile.

So what should we do about it? Well, why not institute a “slop tax?” proposes technologist Mike Pepi in an essay for The Guardian.

Such a tax would “restore balance to what has heretofore been a one-way extraction,” and “ensure robust institutional support structures for human creativity forced to compete in a sea of meaningless content,” Pepi writes. Essentially, you shave off a little of the AI industry’s bottom line to fund the arts, sciences, and other cultural institutions that they mined for free.

AI slop is more than just an ugly annoyance. In Pepi’s view, it’s a “malicious manipulation of human cognitive labor and the institutions that support it.” These billions of “facsimiles of human creativity and cognition” end up drawing resources away from actual human creatives.

The “slop tax,” as Pepi envisions, would work as follows: if a company “furnishes or hosts generative AI content,” it’s hit with an annual ~1 percent tax. “This revenue goes into a publicly controlled fund that distributes grants back to varying kinds to cultural institutions, artists and researchers — the very same groups the models used as training data.”

The largest AI companies are worth trillions of dollars each, so even a one percent tax will provide a windfall for cultural workers, bedrock cultural institutions, and grants for research, Pepi wrote. The interesting aspect is that the tax rate isn’t high enough to be considered a punitive action, giving AI companies less to rebel against, while still providing a boatload of cash.

How feasible it would be to implement a slop tax in reality is up for debate, but in Pepi’s view it would more meaningfully address one of AI’s catastrophic consequences, the destruction of cognitive and creative labor, than other attempts to rein in the industry. Bernie Sanders’ call for a “pause” on AI, he accuses, borrows “from doomers’ prognostications of a sentient artificial general intelligence — a distracting fantasy more at home in science fiction.”

But a “small tax on the worst parts of the industry,” he says, “could unleash a cultural renaissance.”

More on AI: Trump Is Inflicting Massive Damage to His Public Image by Posting Offensive AI Slop

The post An Elegant Solution to AI Slop: Tax It, and Use the Resulting Billions of Dollars to Fund Cultural Institutions, Artists, and Researchers appeared first on Futurism.

Critics say Trump’s acting AG just undercut own case against Comey: ‘Play this in court’
News

Critics say Trump’s acting AG just undercut own case against Comey: ‘Play this in court’

by Raw Story
May 3, 2026

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche was pressed Sunday on the Justice Department’s (DOJ) indictment of former FBI Director James Comey ...

Read more
News

OPEC Plus, in Symbolic Gesture, to Increase Oil Production

May 3, 2026
News

Mayor Mamdani’s new scam: Charge NYC taxpayers to hire his rent-a-mobs

May 3, 2026
News

Halo 2 and Halo 3 Remakes Are in Development According to Xbox Leaker

May 3, 2026
News

I’m a therapist who lost my husband at 26 — here’s how I learned to show up at work on my hardest days

May 3, 2026
The dollar has fallen 10% under Trump. It helps big multinational companies but is a ‘hidden tax’ raising costs from vacations to groceries

The dollar has fallen 10% under Trump. It helps big multinational companies but is a ‘hidden tax’ raising costs from vacations to groceries

May 3, 2026
I quit my full-time job at 26. Now I work remotely 10 to 20 hours a week while traveling with my partner.

I quit my full-time job at 26. Now I work remotely 10 to 20 hours a week while traveling with my partner.

May 3, 2026
‘Republicans are freaked out’ as Trump self-inflicted wound takes its toll: journalists

‘Republicans are freaked out’ as Trump self-inflicted wound takes its toll: journalists

May 3, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026