What’s happened? If the internet lately feels like it has been swallowed by AI-generated junk, there’s a new tool that might help clean things up. Slop Evader is a browser extension that filters your search results, so you only see content published before November 30, 2022. That is the day ChatGPT launched, which later triggered the massive surge of AI-generated content online. If you install this extension on Chrome or Firefox, your searches skip the deluge of AI-slop and show you the era of pre-ChatGPT internet.
How does it work? Slop Evader does not scan for AI like DuckDuckGo. Instead, it applies a date filter in your search query to exclude results created after the cutoff date. That way, you avoid AI-generated articles, synthetic media spam, and other low-quality AI content in search results. It currently filters searches on popular sites where AI slop is common, including YouTube, Reddit, Stack Exchange, and the parenting site MumsNet.
Tega Brain
Why it matters? Generative AI has created a wave of ‘fast content’ which is often low-effort, repetitive, or even misleading at times. This kind of output can overwhelm search results and social feeds. Slop Evader pulls the plug on such content and offers a chance to reclaim the old-school internet with reliable articles and authentic human opinions.
Recommended VideosThe upside and the trade-offs: Using Slop Evader means giving up access to recent results. This means no news, blog posts, research, or websites created after November 2022. If you rely on current info, that’s a heavy trade-off, but this restriction is deliberate. According to the creator, Tega Brain, the goal isn’t to permanently block AI content, but to make people more aware of how much synthetic information they normally accept without questioning it (via 404 Media).
Image used with permission by copyright holder
OK, what’s next? Brain has been very clear that Slop Evader is not a permanent solution.
- The real purpose is to push people to question what kind of online world they are accepting.
- She plans to expand support to more sites and is also working on a version that uses DuckDuckGo’s search index instead of Google’s.
In the end, Slop Evader is not about nostalgia. It is a reminder that change will only happen if people demand a more human web.