Generative AI Vegetarianism

Internet roasts “AI vegetarian” label—catchy vibe or sanctimony salad

TLDR: A writer vows to avoid generative AI and calls it “AI vegetarianism,” flipping off default AI features and AI-made media. Commenters argue the label is confusing or sanctimonious, pitch alternatives like “GenAI‑free,” and ask if community‑built, ethical AI could exist—showing the fight is as much branding as belief.

A writer proudly declared themselves a “generative AI vegetarian,” turning off every chatbot feature they can find and refusing to share AI-made content. Cue the comment section flame-grill. The top vibe? The name, not the diet, is the drama. One early reply begged for a rebrand—“Needs a catchy label”—and it snowballed from there on the discussion.

Critics pounced: “Vegetarianism is such a bad label lol,” scoffed one, arguing it confuses people and sounds like marketing cosplay. Another went full roast, calling the analogy “overwhelmingly sanctimonious.” Meanwhile, the jokesters rolled out alternatives: “GenAI‑free,” “organic software,” even the cursed “Sloppitism.” It was name soup, and everyone brought a ladle.

But under the meme parade, a real question bubbled: Is there such a thing as “ethically‑sourced AI”? One commenter dreamed of a community-powered, peer‑to‑peer model where people donate their computers to train open systems for everyone. That clashed with the original post’s vibe—avoidance in daily life, but open to helping people use AI to make government data easier to access.

So yes, the post was about opting out of AI creep—turning off Copilot, Gemini, Apple Intelligence, and swerving AI-made media. But the crowd made it about branding and morality: catchy slogan or holier‑than‑thou salad? Either way, the label war stole the show—and the bots didn’t even have to write it.

Key Points

  • The author defines “generative AI vegetarianism” as deliberately avoiding generative AI tools in daily life.
  • Generative AI is explained as producing media from user prompts using large datasets and transformer-based models, with ChatGPT as an example.
  • Concrete steps include disabling Microsoft Copilot, Google Gemini, and Apple Intelligence, and avoiding use of AI features in apps like WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger.
  • The author avoids consuming or resharing AI-generated content and prefers software and creators that eschew generative AI.
  • Non-generative AI (e.g., recommendations, Google Photos organization) is still used, distinguishing it from generative AI.

Hottest takes

“Vegetarianism is such a bad label lol” — dvrp
“overwhelmingly sanctimonious” — GaryBluto
“ethically‑sourced AI?” — orangebread
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