Reddit is using LLMs to solve a problem LLMs largely created
In the AI era, platforms have no choice but to fight fire with fire to cull spam.
In Brief Posted: 8:22 AM PDT · July 6, 2026 Image Credits:TechCrunch Amanda Silberling Reddit is using LLMs to solve a problem LLMs largely created It’s easier than ever for bad actors to spew spam across the internet as powerful large language models (LLMs) become effortlessly accessible. If you’ve spent about ten minutes on the internet in the last few years, you will know that this means spam and bot content have gotten become an even bigger problem than they already were. Reddit says it developed tools with LLMs to cut down on spam, much of which was created with LLMs in the first place.
It’s a bit ironic, but in the AI era, platforms have no choice but to fight fire with fire. According to the platform, Reddit blocks 23 million spam views per day and catches about 25,000 new spam posts and comments each day. Social platforms have been building automated spam reduction tools for years, but Reddit says these updated tools are catching spam at a higher rate.
“We leverage LLMs to catch the highly subtle, coordinated patterns of fake behavior and artificial hype that older systems once missed,” a Reddit blog post says. The company claims it reduced users’ exposure to spam by 20% from January to March compared with the prior three months. Platforms like YouTube, Meta, and Instagram allow users to post AI-generated content so long as they disclose it, and TikTok is going as far as letting users toggle how much AI-generated content they want to see.
If platforms are able to detect AI-generated content faster, that also means that they have the potential to flag violative content like hate speech more quickly. But platform experts have continually reminded us that AI content moderation must be paired with human moderation to get the most effective results. Topics AI, Reddit, Social November 4 Boston Last chance to save up to $190 on TechCrunch Founder Summit.
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Subscribe By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice. Related Enterprise Microsoft lays off nearly 5,000 employees across Xbox, commercial sales Rebecca Bellan 14 minutes ago Security Canadian spy agency says it hacked drug traffickers, extremists and a ransomware gang last year Zack Whittaker 38 minutes ago Apps How to reserve and change your WhatsApp username Ivan Mehta 1 hour ago Latest in Social In Brief Reddit is using LLMs to solve a problem LLMs largely created Amanda Silberling 18 seconds ago Apps How to reserve and change your WhatsApp username Ivan Mehta 1 hour ago Gaming Meta quietly launches vibe-coded gaming app Pocket Sarah Perez 4 days ago In Brief Posted: 8:22 AM PDT · July 6, 2026 Posted: 8:22 AM PDT · July 6, 2026 It’s easier than ever for bad actors to spew spam across the internet as powerful large language models (LLMs) become effortlessly accessible. If you’ve spent about ten minutes on the internet in the last few years, you will know that this means spam and bot content have gotten become an even bigger problem than they already were.
Reddit says it developed tools with LLMs to cut down on spam, much of which was created with LLMs in the first place. It’s a bit ironic, but in the AI era, platforms have no choice but to fight fire with fire. According to the platform, Reddit blocks 23 million spam views per day and catches about 25,000 new spam posts and comments each day.
Social platforms have been building automated spam reduction tools for years, but Reddit says these updated tools are catching spam at a higher rate. “We leverage LLMs to catch the highly subtle, coordinated patterns of fake behavior and artificial hype that older systems once missed,” a Reddit blog post says. The company claims it reduced users’ exposure to spam by 20% from January to March compared with the prior three months.
Platforms like YouTube, Meta, and Instagram allow users to post AI-generated content so long as they disclose it, and TikTok is going as far as letting users toggle how much AI-generated content they want to see. If platforms are able to detect AI-generated content faster, that also means that they have the potential to flag violative content like hate speech more quickly. But platform experts have continually reminded us that AI content moderation must be paired with human moderation to get the most effective results.
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