Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

The amount of AI slop and brainrot videos on YouTube will shock you

21% videos are AI slop and 33% are brainrot

Add as a preferred source on Google
YouTube
Unsplash

A new study by Kapwing says that a huge volume of videos circulating on YouTube are brainrot content and ‘AI slop’: a catch-all term for low-quality, AI-generated content designed to farm views rather than offer real value.

Kapwing’s researchers tested this by creating a new YouTube account and tracking the first 500 videos recommended by the platform. Out of those, 104 videos, roughly 21%, were classified as AI slop, while 165 videos, about 33%, fell into a broader “brainrot” category.

Recommended Videos

Brainrot includes repetitive, bizarre, or hypnotic clips that are easy to watch but lack substance. Together, the findings suggest that a significant chunk of what new users see is automated content rather than work made by human creators.

How much AI slop YouTube is actually serving

The scale of such content goes far beyond a few strange recommendations. Kapwing also analyzed trending YouTube channels across multiple countries and found 278 channels made entirely of AI slop, spread across the global top 100 rankings.

These channels are not small. Collectively, they have accumulated billions of views and millions of subscribers, translating into tens of millions of dollars in estimated annual ad revenue. Some regions stand out in particular. In Spain, AI slop channels have more than 20 million combined subscribers, higher than totals seen in the United States or Brazil.

South Korea’s slop channels have generated over 8.45 billion total views, while India’s largest AI slop channel alone has surpassed 2 billion views. These rankings show that AI slop is not confined to one market, but is spreading globally.

Why is it spreading so fast?

The problem is less about individual creators and more about incentives baked into recommendation algorithms. AI-generated videos are cheap to produce, can be uploaded at a massive scale, and are often optimized to trigger curiosity or endless scrolling.

New users are especially vulnerable because the algorithm has no viewing history to guide recommendations. For YouTube, the findings raise uncomfortable questions. If a fifth of early recommendations are AI slop videos, it could reshape how users experience YouTube before they ever find creators they actually want to watch.

While YouTube has rolled out tools designed to curb deepfakes, I would like to see the platform offering better controls to limit AI-slop, much like TikTok already does. A report by Amazon Web Services (AWS) researchers claims that 57% of the internet may already be AI sludge.

This is why DuckDuckGo offers tools to filter low-quality AI content, while some tools like Slop Evader go even further by stripping the web back to how it looked before generative AI took over.

As AI tools make it easier to flood platforms with synthetic media, the challenge will be deciding whether engagement alone should keep driving what new viewers see first.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Gemini will now take notes for you in Google Meet for you, if you the minimum $20 AI tax
Yet another Google subscription just dropped for Gemini
Google Meet Take Notes for me Gemini

Google has just released a useful Gemini feature, which you can try if you are a paying member of course. The company is now bringing "Take notes for me" for Gemini, which will be available in Google Meet for Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra subscribers, along with eligible Workspace business customers.

For personal users, the feature starts with Google AI Pro, which costs $19.99 per month in the US. In other words, Gemini can now take your Google Meet notes, provided you pay the minimum AI tax.

Read more
After iPad Pro and MacBook Pro, the iMac could be the next in line for an OLED screen upgrade
iMac with M4

The iPhone got an OLED panel in 2017, while the iPad Pro followed in 2024. Even the MacBook Pro is expected to follow later this year or early next year. But what about the iMac?

According to TrendForce, the iMac could get an OLED upgrade. There's no timeline yet, but the direction is clear. Apple wants to replace its current display technologies with OLED, raising the bar for color quality for both regular users and professionals.

Read more
This $1,299 gaming PC wants to be a Steam Machine without waiting for Valve
Valve’s Steam Machine dream is already real in MetaPC's new prebuilt
MetaPC's Steamroller is a new Steam Machine rival

Valve’s Steam Machine may be the face of SteamOS, but the platform isn't exclusive to it. A big announcement after Steam Machine's unveiling was that SteamOS would be arriving on systems outside of the new hybrid console. Now, MetaPCs is one of the first to take advantage of this by opening the preorders for the Steamroller, a new prebuilt gaming desktop that ships with SteamOS installed by default.

Though Steamroller is not trying to be a tiny console-like cube. It is a normal desktop PC with standard parts and a real upgrade path. The system costs $1,299 and is listed with a preorder date of July 3, 2026.

Read more