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Rise of the Garbage Internet | 매거진에 참여하세요

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publish_date : 25.07.31

Rise of the Garbage Internet

#brainrot #garbage #internet #theory #AI #age #role #contents

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Brainrot Aesthetics and the Rise of the Garbage Internet

What happens when AI makes the content and humans become the consumers of chaos?

"Maybe the internet wasn’t made for humans anymore."
A haunting idea. But it echoes in every grotesque AI-generated image flooding your feed, every pointless piece of content clogging your screen. These aren’t isolated glitches — they might be the new default.

What Is Brainrot?

"Brainrot" is internet slang that literally means “my brain is rotting.”

It started as a self-deprecating meme — a reaction to doomscrolling through too much repetitive, loud, overstimulating content.

But today’s brainrot goes beyond meme fatigue. It’s grown into a cultural aesthetic.

A sensory overload. An ironic embrace of chaos. And nowhere is this clearer than in the rising popularity of the Italian Brainrot style.


The Aesthetic of Italian Brainrot

It’s not just bad art. It’s a deliberate mess of visual contradictions. Think:

  • Classical Roman sculptures with satanic overlays

  • Severed heads and six-eyed saints

  • Winged monks floating through gold-drenched cathedrals

  • Latin gibberish scrawled across the sky

  • Sacred, surreal, and slightly nauseating

These images are often created using AI tools like Midjourney or DALL·E. The result is uncanny, grotesque, and oddly addictive.

People label them playfully — “Italian Brainrot,” “Krukru Pingpong,” or simply “what the hell is this lol.”
But beneath the humor lies something deeper: we are choosing to consume nonsense. And finding meaning in that very act.

Why People Crave Brainrot

  • Relief from polish fatigue
    We’re exhausted by hyper-polished, perfectly branded content. Crude, ugly, or surreal images offer a form of psychological release — like an anti-aesthetic cleanse.

  • Irony is the message
    Brainrot memes aren’t meant to make sense. Their beauty lies in absurdity. There’s something weirdly funny about “deep-looking” art that means absolutely nothing.

  • The surrealism of AI creation
    AI-generated images feel both alien and familiar — a dream logic we can’t explain. This “uncanny familiarity” keeps us scrolling.

Enter: The Garbage Internet Theory

The web is no longer made by — or for — humans.

Coined by digital theorists around 2023, the Garbage Internet Theory suggests that a majority of online content is no longer human-made.

Worse — it’s not even meant for humans to enjoy.

Let that sink in.

What Is the Garbage Internet?

It’s not just low-quality content. It’s an ecosystem flooded with machine-generated noise.

Blogs, news, reviews, Q&As — all pumped out by ChatGPT clones and SEO factories. Content created without intent and without meaning.

The goal?
To trick the algorithm. To rank. To click.
Not to inform, delight, or move anyone.

Core Signs of the Garbage Internet

  • Automated content at scale
    From AI-written listicles to bot-generated product reviews, most content today is created by tools like Jasper, Copy.ai, or scraped by content farms.

  • Synthetic traffic and engagement
    Bots simulate clicks, likes, comments — and even page views. Much of what appears popular online is actually fake.

  • The erosion of trust
    Is this post written by a human? Is this review real? Is this comment genuine? We no longer know. And often, we stop caring.

By 2022, over 50% of all web traffic was already non-human.
Most of it came from bots, scrapers, and AI agents.

AI: Not Just a Tool, but a User

Today, AI doesn’t just help us browse the web — it uses the web.

  • - It creates content.
    - It comments.
    - It buys ads.
    - It manipulates trends.
    - It engages in conversations.

And it doesn’t sleep.

We’ve entered a post-human feedback loop — where machines make content for other machines, and humans… just scroll past, dazed.

Why Brainrot Might Be the Symptom and the Cure

In a world drowning in content nobody meant to make, brainrot is both protest and punchline. It says:

“If the internet is meaningless now, we’ll laugh in its face.”

By consuming images that are grotesque, nonsensical, or surreal, we ironically reclaim a sense of meaning. We feel something — even if it’s confusion, disgust, or absurd joy.

Brainrot doesn’t try to fix the internet. It simply mirrors what it has become.

Maybe that’s why we keep sharing these weird, broken, AI-drenched images.

They tell the truth:

We’re no longer searching for answers.
We’re searching for signals that we’re not the only ones still feeling something.