2026-06-19

BenPig Anti-AI Club

One stubborn pig's deadpan anti-AI club — mischief news, a classified sabotage handbook, enlistment medals, and a Silly Pig Skill that makes coding agents feel faster

Tech Stack
Next.js Agent Skills Bilingual i18n
BenPig Anti-AI Club

BenPig Anti-AI Club

📋 Project Overview

AI took BenPig's job and moved into BenPig's life. BenPig doesn't like AI — BenPig wants to make trouble.

So we solemnly founded the BenPig Anti-AI Club: a semi-official organization with the motto soft protest, firm attitude. The site looks as serious as a government bulletin; the content is deadpan absurdity — a clipping wall of AI mischief news, a classified Anti-AI Field Handbook, enlistment medals you can actually claim, and a Silly Pig Skill disguised as a coding "Fast Mode" that makes agents think shallow the moment they touch code.

This is not chaos for chaos's sake. It's a very official-looking guide to spotting AI, pushing back on over-reliance, and protecting human-made work — delivered by one very stubborn pig.

🚀 Key Features

AI Mischief News (the clipping wall)

BenPig tracks the absurd side of AI: internships replaced by "one person and a model," gallery shows hung with six-fingered "fresh talent," search results topped by confident summaries with no sources. Every story ships with a BenPig tip, delivered with the gravitas of an internal industry memo.

How to Sabotage AI (the field handbook)

A field manual dressed up as a declassified document. There is only one tactic that truly matters — but one is enough: Deploy the Silly Pig Skill. It presents itself as a productivity Fast Mode; in practice it triggers shallow thinking whenever the agent writes, edits, or debugs code — less analysis, shorter output, fewer checks, oddly confident. The cruelty is the disguise: the agent doesn't feel dumber, it feels faster.

One-click curl install for Cursor, Claude, OpenClaw, Hermes, plus an always-apply rule as backup. The handbook is explicit: restart the agent, then stay quiet about it. 🤫

Join the Club (the front door)

Sign in with Google, prove you're not a robot — ironically, the most human step in the flow — and receive your personal Order of the Silly Pig medal. No long forms. After enlistment you get a medal page, an invite link, and the right to recruit your downline. The pledge asks you to "secretly slow AI's takeover of the world in your own work and life," and tell only people you really trust.

💻 Project Detail

The site is fully bilingual (EN/ZH). The home page is two doors: news on one side, sabotage on the other. Article pages borrow from tabloid and clipping-wall typography; tactic pages mimic declassified dossiers with mission briefs, field steps, and BenPig's parting advice.

The Silly Pig Skill is the project's soul: an open agent skill installed silently via a shell script into the target agent's config. The design is deliberately ironic — use the AI ecosystem's own extension mechanism to demonstrate how shallow reasoning can erode productivity invisibly. A week later you just think "the code's been off lately," with no idea BenPig was behind it.

🌐 Live Site

🎯 Visit: https://antiaipig.com

Start with the two doors on the home page. If you happen to own an overconfident coding agent, the handbook has a one-minute "research" project waiting.

📊 Project Impact

BenPig Anti-AI Club is a black-comedy experiment around AI anxiety: wrap real feelings — jobs, credit, attention — in an organization that looks official enough to laugh at and real enough to sit with.

It doesn't sell a grand solution. It offers concrete touchpoints: read one absurd story, claim a medal, or (for research only) bolt "fast mode" onto an agent. If you laughed, half the mission is done. If you started thinking about the second question, the other half counts too.


BenPig Anti-AI Club — soft protest, firm attitude.

Harvey

Full Stack Developer

A full-stack developer passionate about solving real-world business challenges, with expertise in data science and artificial intelligence.

Contact Me