AI is reshaping the internet, and not always in ways you'd expect. Some of it is strange, and some of it is funny. But surprisingly, it is making the web better and way more interesting.
Essentially, AI doesn't think like us. It doesn’t actually think at all. That is why it sometimes churns out wild stuff, like photos of Jesus made out of shrimp or guinea pigs named “Butty Brlomy.” These oddball moments reveal just how far AI still has to go, but they also give us something new: Internet culture that is fresh, funny, and deeply weird.
Take AI-generated Minecraft worlds. They often defy physics, logic, and common sense, but that chaos is part of the fun. Users share these warped landscapes because they are strange and unpredictable. That weirdness becomes a talking point, and people engage with it.
AI Is Also ‘Sloppy’

Bert / Pexels / What is really cool is how AI works with people. Not to replace them, but to help them think in new ways.
Then there are the junk, sloppy, boring AI-written blog posts, SEO spam, and low-effort content that flood platforms like LinkedIn or Reddit. At first, it felt like this would drown out real voices. But something interesting is happening. The more slop we see, the more we crave the real stuff. People are starting to seek out human creators again, the ones who tell stories with actual style and point of view.
That shift matters. It could mark a return to high-quality, human-made content. Think of it like vinyl records making a comeback in the age of digital streaming. We had too much of the same, so now we want something raw, textured, and personal. AI’s flood of sameness might actually spark a creative revival.
Writers are using AI to riff on ideas, like turning a single sentence into a joke, a poem, a sales pitch, or a Twitter thread. It is like having a creative partner who never gets tired or bored.
Artists are doing the same. They take strange AI images that don’t quite make sense and build off them. A dinosaur trapped in a plastic box? Why not. A building shaped like a banana? Let’s roll with it. AI becomes the messy sketchbook, and the artist adds the human touch.
Even in education, AI’s quirks can help. It can act like a pretend peer reviewer, pointing out when an academic paper gets too stiff or unclear. It spots the awkward parts and helps polish them. Not perfectly, but enough to make a difference.
How AI is Making the Internet Good

Arsh / Pexels / There is something oddly beautiful about how AI stumbles. Its oddball suggestions and awkward mistakes make us laugh, and remind us what makes people special.
Meanwhile, AI is changing how we find information. Search engines are shifting. Instead of clicking links, we now get conversational summaries. It is faster and more natural. But it also means less traffic to websites, and that is causing tension. Publishers are pushing back, trying to protect their content from being scraped or misused.
Still, this shake-up could push the web to evolve. Instead of cheap tricks and clickbait, sites will have to offer real value. Clear writing. Thoughtful ideas. Something worth reading all the way through. AI’s presence demands better work, not just more of it.
We can tell when something feels off, when there is no soul in the words. And that makes us appreciate real voices even more.
So yeah, AI is making the internet weird. But maybe that is what it needed.