this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2026
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The list is (in my opinion) just human written slop.

The requirements for some software to make it in the list are so lax, that the list loses its meaning. It really isn't a list of "slop" but just list of software which is somehow connected to AI. In my opinion it's similar to the anti systemd hate. People think they understand some software better than the maintainer who wrote it.

Examples of bs criteria:

  • Having AI features - This one is a conundrum to me. Why do you need a list for it? If you are using the app, you know if it has AI features or not and if you have not noticed, why are you bothered?
  • Having agents.md in the repository - This one does not mean anything on it self. Could just be there for others to use, not necessary for the maintainers. It's Open Source, remember? Someone else might read it and might want to use different tools than you.
  • KeepassXC - This one is bizzare. They link KeepassXC's blog post, which explains why KeepassXC is very much not "slop". Every tiny change has to be reviewed by a maintainer regardless if it was human or AI written. Because they allow LLM usage, they also encourage people to disclose their usage. This is what I think should secure codebases aim for.

Ironically I will link to the list: https://codeberg.org/small-hack/open-slopware

Also the KeepassXC blog post: https://keepassxc.org/blog/2025-11-09-about-keepassxcs-code-quality-control/

Yes, I am aware that I have no authority over which links you can post and which ones not but hopefully this post will convince you.

Perhaps someone will create a better list of actual slop? I think the idea of it is pretty good, this particular list is crap though.

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[–] HybridSarcasm@lemmy.world 39 points 2 weeks ago

Downvote, hide, and move on. If it isn’t against the rules, it’s allowed.

[–] smeg 57 points 2 weeks ago

Counterpoint: I think it's reasonable to inform people of what a dev team allows into their project, or how they're directing the development of the product.

For some people, it will be a hard no. Others maybe don't mind AI interoperability if it's not in the codebase itself. Others won't mind if the app is critical to their workflow, but may reject apps that are less critical. Others don't care at all.

I look at it like the Denuvo labeling curator on Steam. Nothing wrong in informing people.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 28 points 2 weeks ago

Having agents.md is a silly criteria... One project I'm with is doing GSoC this year and another org recommended using agents.md to tell the AI that will inevitably be used that it needs to tell the person that AI copy paste will not be accepted and please don't bother unless you can demonstrate understanding of what you are doing.

[–] danielquinn@lemmy.ca 7 points 2 weeks ago

I'd never heard of this list, so thanks for sharing. I have to say while some of the projects seem to have been included due to minor offences, I'm really disappointed in some of my favourite FOSS projects.

[–] hummingbird@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago

This uses some pretty terrible criteria. Being critical is imporant, and slopware should be looked upon very spektically. But please do this properly and dont slop together questionable lists.

[–] drkt@scribe.disroot.org 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

~~The more you push back against reasonable usage of LLMs in open code projects, the more you're gonna incentivize them to not disclose it.~~

~~If you don't trust the developer with the usage of LLMs, why do you trust them at all?~~

edit: I thought I was replying to the other post I'm sorry