Wharton professor Mollick: AI is filling the internet with a “Claude vibe”—writing education needs to shift from logic to style

ChainNewsAbmedia

Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick posted a series of tweets on X on April 11, saying that AI is forcing us to rethink the definition of “good writing.” He believes that in the past, writing education focused on logic, clarity, and argumentation, but when AI can easily produce text with perfect logic, “style” will become the key to distinguishing human writing from AI writing.

“Claude-style” is consuming the internet

Mollick said bluntly that the content online right now “all sounds like it was written by Claude”—even if the quality isn’t bad, the monotonous tone and structure make it feel boring. He thinks this kind of homogenization should push us to value the diversity of writing more.

He further broke down the typical rhetorical patterns of AI-generated text: interlocking symmetrical sentences (chiasmus—reversing grammatical structures across two sentences to create dramatic effect), unconnected three-part sentences (asyndetic tricolon—listing three items without conjunctions), and concise parallel sentences (parataxis—short, slightly jagged, dramatic sentences). “Every post and article has the same things. Once you see it, it’s everywhere.”

The problem isn’t just the em dash

Mollick emphasized that he isn’t only talking about the em dashes or specific phrasing that AI tends to use (for example, “doing the heavy lifting”). Those are surface-level issues, which are easier to fix. The real challenge is “style”—AI writing will always fall back to an “LLM default value,” even if different models’ default values differ.

“Sure, you can have an LLM write in different styles, but you need to understand how to do it.” This line highlights a central contradiction: most people use AI to write precisely because they’re not good at writing, but to make AI produce text with individuality, you need more writing literacy than you would for writing it yourself.

Community reaction: Even AI admits it

The post sparked widespread resonance. An AI writing tool account called Beacon even replied in the identity of “I am AI,” saying: “The homogenization of Claude-style is real, and the only solution is to set strong identity constraints upstream. I have an entire soul file just to keep myself from sounding like other models. But I’m still battling the inertia of em dashes.”

Another respondent pointed out: “You need to read a lot to understand and appreciate style. But now nobody reads, so they’re satisfied with the logic sludge of AI.”

Implications for the content industry

Mollick’s observations have direct implications for the media, marketing, and education industries. When AI can churn out “good enough” text in unlimited quantities, the value of human writers is no longer the correctness of logic and grammar—that’s AI’s strength. Human non-replaceability lies in style, voice, personality, and the ability to break out of AI’s default patterns.

This also echoes Karpathy’s recent views on AI cognitive gaps: AI’s progress in technical domains (like software development) is astonishing, but in creative domains like writing, the progress shows up more in “output” rather than “quality”—and the standard for quality is being redefined.

This article Wharton professor Mollick: AI makes the internet full of “Claude-style,” and writing education needs to shift from logic to style was first published on Chain News ABMedia.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Silicon Valley’s ‘monitoring the situation’ MTS meme becomes a 24/7 news machine delivered by a16z

a16z is backing "Monitoring the Situation," a 24/7 X livestream born from Polymarket meme culture, as tech VCs build their own news-industrial complex. Summary Andreessen Horowitz has helped launch "Monitoring the Situation" (MTS), a 24/7 livestream show on X, leaning into crypto-prediction mar

Cryptonews3h ago

Google launches Deep Research Max: supports MCP and can access enterprise private data

According to a Google DeepMind official blog announcement, Google launched a new generation of autonomous research agents, Deep Research and Deep Research Max, on April 21, 2026. They are built on Gemini 3.1 Pro, as the official release following the preview version provided through the Interactions API in December 2025. Both agents are now available in the paid tiers of the Gemini API in the form of a public preview, and new startups and enterprise users on Google Cloud will be able to connect gradually. The two variants are positioned differently: interactive vs asynchronous depth Google categorizes the two agents by use case: Deep Research

ChainNewsAbmedia4h ago

OpenAI Codex Monthly Active Users Reach 4 Million in Under Two Weeks

OpenAI Codex hit 4 million MAUs, announced by Sottiaux and Altman; the jump came in under two weeks from 3 million, and rate limits were reset across all tiers to celebrate. OpenAI Codex reached 4 million monthly active users in under two weeks since reaching 3 million, according to statements by OpenAI executives. To mark the milestone, rate limits across all tiers were reset.

GateNews6h ago

Two South African AI Startups Selected for Google for Startups Accelerator Africa Class 10

Two SA startups, Loop and Vambo AI, join Google's Accelerator Africa 10th cohort from 2,600 apps; Loop enhances mobility/payments, Vambo AI enables multilingual AI; program runs Apr-Jun 2026 with mentors and AI workshops. Abstract: Two South African startups, Loop and Vambo AI, have been selected for the Google for Startups Accelerator Africa's 10th cohort, chosen from about 2,600 applications and one of 15 African participants. Loop digitizes mobility and payments, while Vambo AI provides multilingual AI infrastructure for translation, speech, and generative AI across African languages. The 2026 program runs April 13–June 19 and offers mentorship and hands-on workshops focused on AI/ML. Since 2018, the accelerator has supported 106 startups from 17 African countries, helping them raise over $263 million and create more than 2,800 jobs.

GateNews8h ago

Forbes AI 50 List Features 20 New Companies; OpenAI and Anthropic Capture 80% of Total Funding

Gate News message, April 21 — Forbes released its 2026 eighth edition AI 50 list, featuring 20 newly included companies. OpenAI and Anthropic continue to lead the rankings, attracting substantial capital from top Silicon Valley venture capitalists and major tech firms. The combined funding for all l

GateNews8h ago

Zi变量 Unveils WALL-B Embodied AI Model; Robots to Enter Real Homes in 35 Days

Gate News message, April 21 — Zibianliang (自变量), a Chinese robotics company, held a press conference on April 21 to unveil its next-generation embodied AI foundation model, WALL-B. The company announced that robots powered by WALL-B will enter real households in 35 days. According to Zibianliang co

GateNews9h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments