That's not a popular opinion to express these days.
If you point out the excessive length, the rhetorical flaws, and the obvious idiomatic tics of AI writing people don't tend to want to hear it.
When authors had to do the work, you'd notice your article approaching 1900 words and feel the natural need to cut redundant platitudes like this:
> The postmark-mcp backdoor isn't just about one malicious developer or 1,500 weekly compromised installations. It's a warning shot about the MCP ecosystem itself.
An AI feels no such need, and will happily drag their readers through a tiresome circuitous journey.
If you point out the excessive length, the rhetorical flaws, and the obvious idiomatic tics of AI writing people don't tend to want to hear it.
When authors had to do the work, you'd notice your article approaching 1900 words and feel the natural need to cut redundant platitudes like this:
> The postmark-mcp backdoor isn't just about one malicious developer or 1,500 weekly compromised installations. It's a warning shot about the MCP ecosystem itself.
An AI feels no such need, and will happily drag their readers through a tiresome circuitous journey.