/Deslop
Published: (February 19, 2026 at 04:45 AM EST)
7 min read
Source: Hacker News
Source: Hacker News
[](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!D5QC!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Ff72ed656-1daa-43e4-8e6f-01c47be8f7c5_1500x600.png)
The elephant in the room is that we’re all using AI to write but none of us wants to feel like we’re reading AI‑generated content.
We all know it when we see it: LinkedIn posts that read like they were assembled from spare parts. Blog posts with all the personality of a terms‑and‑conditions page.
At **[Mooch](https://mooch.agency/)**, we’ve been living and breathing AI for **2 decades**, and we’ve compiled an internal list of AI‑writing red flags. We even built this into a killer prompt that will */deslop/* all your content, whether it’s AI‑generated or not. Check the link at the bottom.
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### The “dash‑jam” habit
You know the one: that long dash jammed into every other sentence to squeeze in an aside or add fake emphasis. Three of them in a single paragraph and the whole thing starts reading like tic.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “The intern was given full trust — and that’s the problem. The team — already stretched thin — had no capacity to mentor. The result — predictably — was chaos.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “The intern was given full trust and that’s the problem. The team was already stretched thin with no capacity to mentor. The result was predictably chaotic.”
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### “Not X, but Y” constructions
AI sets up something the reader never assumed and then corrects it for drama. Once you notice it, you’ll see it everywhere.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “This isn’t because they don’t trust the technology. It’s because they can’t predict it.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “They trust the technology fine. What they can’t do is predict it, and that’s what keeps them up at night.”
---
### “But here’s the thing” clichés
“It’s the written equivalent of a presenter doing a dramatic pause before revealing something that didn’t need revealing.”
**🚩 Red flag**
> “The patterns are valuable. **But here’s the bind:** building a tool to capture them cost more than most agencies could justify.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “The patterns are valuable but building a tool to capture them cost more than most agencies could justify. So they didn’t.”
---
### Empty filler phrases
“Something we’ve observed.” “This is where X really shines.” “It’s worth noting that.” Phrases that add length without adding meaning. They’re what you get when a writer is trying not to offend anybody rather than trying to be clear.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “It’s worth noting that this approach has shown some promising results in certain contexts, and it’s something we’ve observed across a number of teams.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “This approach works. We’ve seen it across a dozen teams now.”
---
### Monotonous short‑sentence stacking
AI stacks short sentences endlessly in long‑form copy with zero variation, no breathing room, no moments where the writing slows down or gets messy. Every sentence hits with the same weight. Paradoxically, none of them land.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “Now, agents act. They send emails. They modify code. They book appointments. They update databases.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “Agents are starting to do real things now, not just answer questions. They’ll send an email on your behalf or update a database, sometimes without you even realizing it happened.”
---
### Uniform paragraph length
Open any 2026 blog post and squint. Every paragraph is the same height: three sentences, four sentences, three sentences, four sentences. Human writing doesn’t look like that. Some ideas need a whole paragraph; some need one line.
**🚩 Red flag**
> Four consecutive paragraphs, each exactly three sentences long, each covering a different point with identical pacing.
**✅ Green flag**
> A one‑line paragraph that stops you in your tracks. Then a longer stretch where the idea needs more space. Then another short one. The rhythm follows the thinking.
---
### Forced summaries
AI can’t resist wrapping up with a summary. It restates the key points, adds something about “moving forward”, ties a bow. Good writing trusts you to remember what you just read.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “In summary, by focusing on clear communication, consistent feedback, and mutual trust, teams can build stronger working relationships and deliver better results.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “The best teams I’ve worked with never talked about trust. They just had it. You could feel it in how quickly decisions got made.”
---
### “Let’s …” intros
“Let’s explore.” “Let’s unpack.” “Let’s break it down.” “Let’s dive in.” It’s someone clearing their throat before they speak. Great writers just start.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “In this article, we’ll explore the hidden costs of micromanagement and break down why it persists in modern workplaces. Let’s dive in.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “I micromanaged someone last Tuesday. I didn’t mean to, but I rewrote their entire email before they sent it.”
---
### Rule‑following rigidity
Not a single rule broken. No fragments. No comma splices. No sentences starting with “And” or “But”. It reads like an AI style guide proofread it, which is exactly the problem. Good writing bends rules when bending them sounds better.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “The team delivered the project on time. They exceeded expectations in every category. The client expressed complete satisfaction with the outcome.”
**✅ Green flag**
> “The team delivered on time. Exceeded expectations, apparently. The client was happy. Or said they were.”
---
### Repetitive metaphors
AI finds a metaphor and then repeats it word for word until you want to scream. “Trust battery” four times in one paragraph, always phrased identically. Human writers either forget to reuse it or trust you to remember.
**🚩 Red flag**
> “Trust is like a battery. When the trust battery is full, collaboration flows. But when the trust battery runs low, everything grinds to a halt. To recharge the trust battery, leaders must…”
**✅ Green flag**
> *(content to be added)*
---
*Check out the full prompt at the bottom of this post.*
**“Trust is like a battery. When it’s full, you barely think about it. But let it drain and suddenly every interaction feels like it needs a charger.”**
It’s spelling out things you already understand because it’s hedging against confusion. You end up feeling like someone’s explaining how a door works before letting you through it.
🚩 **Red flag:**
*“Trust is earned over time. You give people small tasks, observe how they handle them, then gradually expand their responsibilities and autonomy based on their demonstrated performance.”*
✅ **Green flag:**
*“Trust is earned. Everyone knows this. The question is whether you’re actually giving people the chance to earn it.”*
Surface‑level praise that could apply to any company, any product, any situation. No insider knowledge, no sharp takes, no specificity. It reads like a landing page.
🚩 **Red flag:**
*“Take Slack, for example. By focusing on seamless team communication, they transformed how modern workplaces collaborate, making it easier for distributed teams to stay connected.”*
✅ **Green flag:**
*“Slack solved the wrong problem brilliantly. Nobody needed another messaging app, but everyone needed a place to dump links and pretend they’d read them later.”*
Obviously, one or two red flags on their own are not an admission of slop. But when you see five or more at the same time, you can be pretty sure AI has been here.
We combined all 12 red flags with a killer prompt that works very well. Upload it to ChatGPT, Claude, or any other AI and it’ll **/deslop/** every one of them.
Leave a comment and let me **know** how you get on.
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