Detect AI-generated content with vocabulary patterns, structure analysis, and personal voice detection.
AI models tend to use certain words more frequently: "delve", "leverage", "robust", "comprehensive", etc. We detect these patterns.
AI-generated content often has uniform paragraph lengths, predictable bullet points, and numbered lists.
Real humans include personal experiences, anecdotes, and emotional markers. AI content often lacks these.
AI tends to produce sentences of similar length with repeated sentence starters. Humans vary more naturally.
Spot AI-sounding filler, repetitive phrasing, and low-signal language so you can tighten writing before it feels generic, synthetic, or forgettable. This page is built for people who want a fast path to a working result, not a vague prompt-and-pray workflow. If you need a more reliable first draft, cleaner output, or a repeatable workflow you can hand to a teammate, Slop Filter is designed to shorten that path.
Most visitors use Slop Filter because they need something specific done now: a deliverable, a decision, or a workflow checkpoint. The sections below show the fastest way to get value from the tool and the adjacent pages that help you keep going.
Run writing through the filter before publishing when you suspect it sounds too polished, vague, or machine-made.
Useful for anyone publishing text who wants to avoid vague AI-sounding language.
Catch generic wording before it weakens the piece
Improve clarity and reduce synthetic-sounding copy
Make drafted writing sound more grounded and specific
A strong outcome from Slop Filter is not just βsome output.β It should be usable with minimal cleanup, aligned to the task you opened the page for, and specific enough that you can paste it into the next step of your workflow without rewriting everything from scratch.
If the first pass feels too generic, use the use cases, FAQs, and related pages here to tighten the scope. That usually produces better results faster than starting over in a blank chat.