Sam Altman calls out AI bots for making social media ‘unreal’
OpenAI CEO and X enthusiast Sam Altman says social media increasingly feels “fake,” as bots and human users begin to sound indistinguishable from one another.
The comment came on Monday after Altman shared posts from the r/Claudecode subreddit, which had been flooded with praise for OpenAI’s Codex — the company’s programming service launched in May as a competitor to Anthropic’s Claude Code.
Altman noted that the subreddit was so saturated with user testimonies switching to Codex that one Redditor even joked: “Is it possible to switch to Codex without posting a topic on Reddit?”
Reflecting on the trend, Altman admitted that he found himself doubting whether the posts were written by humans at all.
“I assume it’s all fake/bots, even though in this case I know Codex growth is really strong and the trend here is real,” he posted on X.
Ironically, Altman’s observation points to a paradox. Humans are now being accused of sounding like large language models (LLMs) — technologies created by OpenAI to mimic human communication.
This blurring of voices is especially striking given that OpenAI models were trained in part on Reddit data, a platform where Altman himself served as a board member until 2022. He was also disclosed as a significant shareholder during Reddit’s IPO last year.
Altman also suggested that social media fandoms — particularly among always-online users — can drift into echo chambers. These groups, he noted, often swing between enthusiasm and hostility, sometimes devolving into “hatefests.”
Altman’s remarks underscore a growing unease about authenticity in the digital age, where AI, bots, and human behavior intersect in unpredictable ways. As LLMs become more widespread, distinguishing between real and synthetic voices online may only get harder.
