Let’s be honest for a moment, shall we? Your LinkedIn feed is a mess. It’s a relentless, algorithmically curated tidal wave of corporate cheerleading and buzzword bingo, and for the last year, the winning word has been ‘AI’. Every other post is from a self-proclaimed guru breathlessly explaining how prompting a chatbot to write a marketing email is the dawn of a new industrial revolution. This relentless noise, this performative hustle, is what we call AI hype culture. And frankly, some of us have had enough.
It’s not just annoying; it’s exhausting. The pressure on professionals is immense. You feel a creeping sense of dread that if you aren’t “leveraging AI” or “integrating LLMs into your workflow,” you’re on a fast track to becoming professionally extinct. One freelancer captured this anxiety perfectly in a recent Wired article, noting, “As a freelancer, a lot of my ability to get jobs is based on being on LinkedIn and being engaged.” Suddenly, your career prospects feel tied to your ability to nod along with the hype.
So, You’re Drowning in AI Hype? There’s an Extension for That.
What happens when a platform becomes unbearable? People get creative. It’s like when a city council bans skateboarding in a public square; the skaters just find new, more interesting spots. In the digital world, this rebellion takes the form of clever bits of code.
Enter the brilliant absurdity of tech satire extensions. These are browser add-ons designed not to make you more productive, but to restore a little bit of your sanity. They are small acts of digital protest, the equivalent of drawing a silly moustache on a very serious-looking advert.
A fantastic example is a new Chrome extension called AI2AI. Its premise is beautifully simple. It scans your LinkedIn feed for posts about Artificial Intelligence and replaces them with facts about the original AI: basketball legend Allen Iverson. Yes, really. Instead of another tedious post about “The 5 AI Tools You Can’t Live Without,” you get a pop-up card with trivia about Iverson’s iconic “crossover” dribble. It’s magnificent.
The creators, Johnross Post and Aurora Johnson, aren’t trying to change the world. They just want to make the professional internet a little less soul-crushing. Post stated their goal was to allow users to “take back control of your feed and take back control of your experience of the internet.” It’s a small, funny jab that makes a much bigger point.
An Industry Addicted to its Own Narrative
This isn’t just about a few annoying posts. This is a full-blown industry narrative critique. Why is the hype so deafening? Follow the money.
Venture capitalists need to justify pouring billions into AI startups that, in many cases, are just fancy wrappers around OpenAI’s API. Those startups need to scream from the rooftops to attract customers and talent. And the big tech incumbents—your Googles, your Microsofts—have to convince Wall Street they haven’t been left behind. The result is a feedback loop of ever-escalating hype.
This is where digital detox tools come into their own. They serve as a crucial counterbalance. Platforms like LinkedIn are designed for maximum engagement, which currently means maximum AI content. They have little incentive to give you a “less hype” button. Their corporate response to the AI2AI extension was as predictable as it was telling: “While I think we can all agree that Allen Iverson will always be the undisputed original AI, browser extensions like this one go against our policies.”
Of course, they do. These tools challenge the platform’s absolute control over your experience. The platform wants you to see what it wants you to see. But what if you’d rather learn about a 2001 NBA Finals appearance than read another article about generative AI?
Taking Back Control of Your Digital Brain
So, what’s the endgame here? Are we all meant to install browser extensions that replace tech chatter with sports trivia? Well, maybe. But the broader point is about user empowerment.
You can and should regain control over your online life. Here are a few thoughts on how:
– Curate Aggressively: The “Mute” button is your best friend. If a connection consistently posts AI hype, mute them. Their ego might take a small hit, but your sanity is more important.
– Question Everything: Before you click ‘like’ on that post about AI revolutionising accountancy, ask yourself: is it true? Is this a genuine breakthrough, or is it just someone trying to sell me a course?
– Log Off: This is the real pro move. The pressure to be constantly “engaged” is a myth perpetuated by the platforms


