Nolen Royalty, a software maker who writes at eieio.games, gets at a problem with AI-generated work that shows up before judgment: the effort signal. His examples include tldraw, the collaborative drawing tool, closing AI-generated pull requests, warm-cream Claude websites, and record collecting, but the point is simple. Polish used to be a proxy for care. Now it isn’t.
What software (and writing, to an extent) is missing now is legibility of effort - the ability to tell at a glance whether something took a human meaningful work.
Until recently, “someone cared enough to write this” was an ok heuristic. Plenty of writing on the internet was bad, but you could convince me that you cared about something just by writing it down.
Of course, generating plausible-looking text - or a plausible-looking website - is trivial now.
For designers, that broken proxy is already visible on the surface. We can all spot the default Claude style now, which is funny until you realize that a visual pattern has become an accusation about how much thought went into the site.
There’s nothing objectively wrong with making a website with a warm-cream background and hero text in a sans-serif font with a single accent word that uses an eye-catching color and a different font.
But when I see a website that has the default Claude style I assume that the author put ~no thought into how the site should look. And I often assume that the author didn’t put too much thought into the rest of the site either.
That’s not fair of me! But “someone made this website” is no longer enough to tell me that the website was important to them. So “default Claude style” is one of my new heuristics.
Taste sounds less mystical when you put it this way. A designer doesn’t make a screen human by avoiding beige or picking a stranger typeface. The work is in the decisions: why this hierarchy, why this contrast, why this interaction, why this amount of friction.
The proliferation of digital music and streaming made having a music collection easy and frictionless. And so a subculture evolved to re-add that friction.
And in small ways I think you see the same things happening now.
I’ve seen people joke about adding typos to emails to prove that they wrote them. MS Paint-style image macros read as more human than detailed, funny images (the image could be AI slop). Websites that look intentionally bad are more interesting than websites that look beautifully bland.

Legibility of Effort
LLMs have broken legibility of effort - our ability to tell, at a glance, whether something took a human real work. What happens next?




















