Critics argue that content farms prioritize SEO and ad revenue over factual accuracy and relevance. Critics also highlight the potential for misinformation, such as conspiracy theories and fake product reviews, being spread through AI-generated content. Some have compared content farms to the fast food industry, calling them "fast content" providers that pollute the web with low-value material. The word "sponsored" displayed when searching has raised questions on the reliability of the site, as it was likely paid to be pushed to the top of the search options. Criticisms of AI and content farms have coalesced because of the new use of AI tools and AI's tendency to
hallucinate facts. AI's permeation of journalism, even in examples some consider trivial, like a summer reading list published by the
Chicago Sun-Times which was written by AI, have created distrust of artificial intelligence. The prevalence of AI to aid in the creation of content for the purpose of
monetization has increased and become common on the internet. Social media content farm accounts totaling hundreds of thousands or millions of followers are not a rarity either. Another instance was a New York man using an AI avatar for his own court case defense. This has raised many concerns based on AI bias, its susceptibility to fabricating information, and how AI makes mistakes on subjects of varied importance like in writing and law. Content farms can also suffer from
AI cannibalism. This is a process in which
large language models (LLMs), models designed for the interpretation of text, speech, translation, and text generation, start to consume the content they created. Over time these text generators can present significant deviation from the original information on which the models were trained. If a content farm uses an LLM to generate text and the LLM is using its own content, its accuracy will fall, leading to misinformation and worse content overall. The United States was targeted because US viewers on Facebook have a higher average revenue per user, about 4 times as high as the world average. This revenue potential incentivized writers to create attention-grabbing content they knew would be shared. These content farm articles can often get hundreds of thousands of people to engage in posts. This manufactured website traffic encourages advertisers to bid higher prices for website advertising space; most companies have automatized bidding meaning unverified spaces can cost companies a lot of money for no return. It is estimated annually $13 billion dollars is wasted on this advertising. == Search engine responses ==