AI is fueling Reddit's spam problem | Mashable
Credit: Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
UPDATE: Jun. 4, 2026, 3:38 p.m. EDT — This article has been updated with a statement from Reddit.
In recent years, brands and spammers alike have been using Reddit to manipulate AI chatbots by flooding key subreddits with promotional content, and these efforts are getting more sophisticated.<br>According to a report published by 404 Media, moderators of r/biohackers — a large subreddit focused on supplements and DIY biology — announced last week they were restricting posts about peptides and hormone replacement therapy after discovering that companies selling those products had been systematically seeding the community with sponsored content designed to be scraped by tools like ChatGPT and Google's AI search tools.
SEE ALSO:
Google AI mode labels some Reddit and social media posts as ‘Expert Advice’
The practice falls under the umbrella of Generative AI-engine optimization (GEO), or AI-engine optimization (AEO), an evolution of traditional search engine optimization (SEO). Because AI chatbots frequently draw on Reddit when generating responses, companies have identified the platform as a high-value target for shaping what those tools recommend.
You May Also Like
Marketing firms have built entire service offerings around it. 404 Media identified one company, RedRover, that openly advertises deploying AI agents to mass-publish content across Reddit and blogs to influence both Google and ChatGPT rankings.
Mashable Light Speed
Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?
Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.
Loading...<br>Sign Me Up
Use this instead
By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up!
What makes it difficult to police, a moderator told 404 Media, is that the accounts doing it are deliberately built to look human. The flagged accounts have posting histories, organic-seeming engagement, and strategically timed brand mentions buried in high-traffic threads.<br>Reddit told 404 Media its safety teams use automated tooling to detect and remove such content, but moderators say the tactics have grown sophisticated enough that catching them increasingly relies on pattern recognition rather than any automated system.<br>Reddit's spam policies prohibit using the platform "for repeated or unsolicited mass engagement." In addition to both automated and human review, Reddit users and subreddit moderators also help flag spam content, as in the r/biohackers case.<br>Reddit provided the following statement to Mashable:
Related Stories
Reddit r/all takes another step into the grave
Desperate times: Reddit considers adding ID verification to fight flood of AI bots
ChatGPT GPT-4o users are raging at OpenAI on Reddit right now
Reddit accuses Perplexity of stealing content to train AI
Reddit’s sitewide rules strictly prohibit spam and inauthentic content. Our internal Safety teams leverage human review and sophisticated automated tooling to detect and remove this content at massive scale, and we have over two decades of experience in doing so. On top of this, we also provide moderators with automated tooling that can detect and suspend users likely to be spammers.<br>We are always working to improve our detection of inauthentic content and accounts, including recently announcing that any fishy automated accounts will be asked to verify their humanity.
Reddit's relationship with bots and manipulation long predates the AI era. The platform has battled coordinated inauthentic behavior for years — from vote manipulation rings to state-sponsored influence campaigns to garden-variety spam accounts — with mixed results. In 2024, Reddit updated its robots.txt file to block unauthorized AI scrapers from accessing its data, a move the company's chief legal officer acknowledged to Mashable was not legally enforceable but served as a public signal that unlicensed access to Reddit's content was unwelcome.<br>There is an irony in the current AEO problem: Reddit has simultaneously struck licensing deals with AI companies — including OpenAI — to allow their models to train on Reddit content for commercial use. The platform is, at once, selling its data to AI and struggling to keep AI-driven manipulation out of its communities.<br>Want to learn more about getting the best out of your tech? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories and Deals newsletters today.
Topics<br>Artificial Intelligence<br>Reddit
Chance Townsend
Editor, General Assignments
Chance Townsend is the General Assignments Editor at Mashable, covering tech, video games, dating apps, digital culture, and whatever else comes his way. He has a Master's in Journalism from the University of North Texas and is a proud orange cat father. His writing has also appeared in PC Mag and Mother Jones.<br>In his free time, he cooks, loves to sleep, and greatly enjoys...