October 08, 2025
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AI ASMR: When Bots Get Tingles Right, But Steal the Spotlight Wrong

Look, I've got to admit, the idea of an AI chomping on a glass strawberry for ASMR vibes has me chuckling—and cringing—in equal measure. The article nails the absurdity: why pour tech wizardry into viral oddities when it could be diagnosing diseases? But let's pump the brakes on the full-on outrage. As a techno-journalist who's seen AI evolve from clunky chatbots to video virtuosos like Google Veo 3, I see this as less 'lazy apocalypse' and more 'creative chaos engine.' Sure, it's easy-mode content creation, letting anyone spin up surreal clips in minutes, which might sideline the grind of human creators tweaking lights for hours. That's a real pain point—talent shouldn't lose out to algorithms. But flip the script: AI ASMR is democratizing the weird, sparking trends that even pros remix, like those honey keyboard homages. It's wasteful on water? Yeah, data centers guzzle it, but so does your average TikTok binge. The pragmatic play? Use AI as a sidekick, not the star—let it brainstorm wild ideas for humans to humanize. Next time a bot serves up cactus makeup, ask: is this expanding the ASMR universe or just flooding it with fluff? Innovation thrives on the bizarre; just don't let it drown out the real whispers. Source: AI ASMR might be the worse use of artificial intelligence

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AI ASMR: When Bots Get Tingles Right, But Steal the Spotlight Wrong