The people who say they used Claude Code to write a 1,000,000 line of code application in assembly language that worked the first time. Or how Microsoft wants you to buy a Copilot+ PC in the backdrop of them and Qualcomm failing to transition to ARM over and over again. Or the Harris campaign insisting, like Democrats have since 1992 or so, that they are going to win this one and all the next ones because Latinos are an increasing fraction of the population. Or the way Sabine Hossenfelder talked to ChatGPT and Eric Weinstein and went insane.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturgeon%27s_law
But it is x10,000 and accelerating all the time thanks to turbo-capitalism, A.I. slop and the people blogging about how they vibe coded an A.I. slop cannon that almost works.
I'd argue that we see this because the American startup scene is obsessed with moonshots instead of sustainable or smart investments. Much of the motivation for starting a business today comes from the potential to artificially manufacture shock-and-awe, which many technically-inclined users will identify and critique. Personally I find this highly insightful, and suspect that it greatly raises the quality of startups even if the snark damages their valuation.
We're all guilty of this to some extent. And for many it's an addiction.