Anti-Slop Detector
AI-generated content sounds generic because nobody checks for it. This tool catches corporate filler, passive voice, and vague openers in real time.
The 4 Violation Types
What gets flagged and why it matters
Corporate Filler Words
8 pts each30 termsThese words say nothing specific. They signal "I used AI" or "I copied a press release." Replace with plain language that actually describes what happened.
AI Tell Phrases
7 pts each14 patternsThese are narrator setups - the writer announcing what they are about to say instead of saying it. AI loves these because they pad word count. Humans skip to the point.
Passive Voice Patterns
6 pts each18 patternsPassive voice hides who did what. "The feature was built" vs "I built the feature." Active voice is clearer, shorter, and sounds like a real person wrote it.
Vague Openers
10 pts each14 phrasesThese waste the most valuable real estate in your content - the first line. Readers decide in 2 seconds. "In today's fast-paced world" earns zero attention.
Substance Over Polish
Why this tool exists
Most AI content fails not because the ideas are bad, but because nobody checks for the patterns that make it sound like AI. Corporate filler words, passive constructions, and vague openers are the three biggest signals that content was generated, not written.
The fix isn't better prompts. It's rules that run automatically. The Anti-Slop Detector is one piece of a larger content operating system that ensures your voice stays yours, even when AI does the drafting.
Voice > template. Substance > polish. Specifics > generics.
Keep Exploring
Build your own content quality system