Research Shows More Than the Vast Majority of Alternative Healing Books on E-commerce Platform Potentially Written by Artificial Intelligence

A comprehensive study has uncovered that artificially created text has infiltrated the natural remedies title section on the online marketplace, with offerings marketing cognitive support gingko formulas, digestive aid fennel preparations, and "citrus-immune gummies".

Alarming Numbers from Automation Identification Investigation

Based on analyzing numerous publications made available in the marketplace's alternative therapies section during January and September of 2024, investigators concluded that over four-fifths appeared to be created by artificial intelligence.

"This constitutes a troubling disclosure of the widespread presence of unmarked, unconfirmed, unchecked, likely automated text that has completely invaded the platform," wrote the analysis's main contributor.

Specialist Worries About Artificially Produced Wellness Guidance

"There is an enormous quantity of herbal research available currently that's entirely unreliable," said a medical herbalist. "Artificial intelligence will not understand the process of filtering through the poor-quality content, all the nonsense, that's totally insignificant. It would misguide consumers."

Illustration: Popular Book Being Questioned

A particular of the ostensibly AI-generated titles, Natural Healing Handbook, currently maintains the top-selling position in Amazon's dermatology, essential oil treatments and alternative therapies subcategories. The book's opening markets the book as "a toolkit for personal confidence", advising users to "focus internally" for answers.

Suspicious Writer Background

The creator is listed as Luna Filby, whose Amazon page describes her as a "thirty-five year old natural medicine practitioner from the beachside location of an Australian coastal town" and founder of the enterprise a natural remedies business. Nevertheless, none of the writer, the enterprise, or connected parties appear to have any online presence beyond the Amazon page for the title.

Detecting Automatically Created Text

Analysis discovered multiple red flags that suggest possible automatically created herbalism material, comprising:

  • Liberal employment of the plant symbol
  • Nature-themed creator pseudonyms like Flower names, Nature words, and Clove
  • References to questionable alternative healers who have advocated unverified remedies for serious conditions

Broader Pattern of Unchecked Automated Material

These titles form part of an expanding phenomenon of unverified AI content being sold on the marketplace. Previously, wild mushroom collectors were cautions to bypass wild plant identification publications sold on the site, apparently authored by chatbots and including doubtful guidance on identifying deadly fungi from edible types.

Demands for Oversight and Labeling

Business representatives have requested Amazon to begin identifying automatically produced material. "Any book that is entirely AI-created ought to be labeled as such content and low-quality AI content must be eliminated as an immediate concern."

Reacting, Amazon commented: "We maintain publication standards governing which publications can be made available for sale, and we have proactive and reactive systems that aid in discovering content that violates our standards, irrespective of if AI-generated or different. We invest considerable time and resources to ensure our standards are complied with, and eliminate books that do not conform to those requirements."

Brittany Smith
Brittany Smith

Lena is a digital strategist passionate about emerging technologies and their impact on business growth.