Skip Navigation

AI cat videos make me uneasy in a way that's difficult to put into words

Lots of rambling and maybe you'll find it unimportant, but I just gotta get this out of my head.

So cats are these adorable and quirky animals. They've been a mainstay in the internet since bandwidth allowed for sharing pictures and videos. I'm a certified cat person, so I've consumed my fair share of cat content online. I also deal a lot with stray cats IRL.

And now for some reason all these scrolly-short-video apps are littered with so many AI videos of cats. A very small minority of them are amusing due to being so unrealistic.

But the vast majority is this. AI videos of cats doing completely ordinary and realistic cat things. In a vacuum the question is obvious: why would anybody waste their energy creating fake videos cats doing things we already have so much real footage online? And the answer is that this thrash is both a profitable business for low effort content mills who already only repost others' videos, and also is being intentionally promoted by the hosting platforms who have a stake in AI slop production.

But the worst part is that some videos are obviously fake to anybody, like this one (there's a third white cat that phases out of existence), but there are many that are obviously fake to me – a cat person who has to either watch out for their body language or have to take antibiotics – but not to many people commenting and sharing the video. The way the cats move is simply "wrong" in subtle ways that most can't tell while scrolling. And the fact that so many people watch that, think it's real and move on fills me with a strange dread.

Imagine how many people who don't have contact with cats will learn their body language wrong. Now imagine how many other way less represented animals might be completely misunderstood due to viral AI videos. Do you know how a Maned Wolf moves? Neither do I. But in the future when you search "Maned Wolf" you might find more fake videos than real ones.

And yes, this applies to way more critical stuff like political happenings, but that's sort of the problem. Because a lot of people will put in an effort to debunking fake political videos. But who's gonna bother debunking mundane videos of tamarins in which they walk weirdly like chimps? How much of the cultural image of mundane aspects of reality is going to be affected by mindlessly generated slop? Have you ever seen a horse IRL? If not, would you trust your intuition of how horses move and communicate through body language from watching videos?

The internet enabled this cool thing where, if you really wanted to learn about something, you could just look it up and dig into it not only through free pirated books but also through images. Now I think I trust people's understanding of basic shit like "why cats meow" even less if their knowledge comes from the internet. I hope every "AI" CEO gets bit by a cat.

Comments

2