All AI Videos Are Harmful (2025)

Creators cringe, scammers feast, and grandma gets duped — the 'AI look' sparks a brawl

TLDR: A writer says AI videos have a creepy signature and already turbocharge scams and silent platform edits. Commenters brawl: some call it theft and trash, others say keep it to memes, while a contrarian warns the real crisis starts when AI becomes impossible to spot.

AI videos aren’t just weird, they’re weaponized — that’s the vibe as readers react to Ibrahim Diallo’s “All AI Videos Are Harmful.” He tried tools like Sora, Runway, and Veo to film his short story, but got glossy, generic clips with that unmistakable AI look. He says even real uploads are being auto-tweaked by platforms — the BBC reports YouTube uses AI edits without consent — and scammers are blasting fake celebrity “advice” at parents’ group chats.

The comments? A roast. One camp calls it industrial-scale plagiarism and resource waste, with voidUpdate fuming about “uncredited video content” and a cosmic RAM drain. Another skewers the “creative freedom” pitch: as SunshineTheCat puts it, the machine is doing the taste, pacing, and color — creators are just prompt passengers. A lighter crew says there’s one safe lane: memes and absurdist comedy — “Bigfoot, please.” But a sharp contrarian take lands: threethirtytwo argues this obvious wrongness is actually good; the real panic starts when AI becomes indistinguishable.

Running underneath is fear for older folks and search results. Diallo warns spammers, scammers, and rage-baiters thrive, and even imagines Google-style AI video summaries. The crowd’s verdict: funny for memes, disastrous for meaning — and brutal on grandma’s feed.

Key Points

  • The author attempted to create a narrative short using AI video tools including OpenAI’s Sora, Runway ML, and Veo.
  • He reports that outputs looked superficially good but generic, making coherent, intentional storytelling difficult.
  • After testing Sora 2, he observed improved realism but the same fundamental narrative limitations.
  • He asserts AI videos have a recognizable aesthetic linked to an updated “uncanny valley,” provoking negative reactions.
  • He claims AI video tools are being used at scale for manipulative content, with older adults frequently targeted via social sharing.

Hottest takes

"ingested terabytes of uncredited video content and are causing a RAM shortage. What's the point?" — voidUpdate
"99% of the the "creativity" from what I've seen is done by the AI" — SunshineTheCat
"This isn’t a crisis" — threethirtytwo
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