Someone built a site to collect AI's dirty laundry. AI Huynya, which translates roughly from Russian slang to "AI bullshit," gathers AI failures, corporate leaks about companies replacing workers with AI, and industry layoffs. The platform runs on strict anonymity. No email collection. No tracking cookies. Submitters are told to use Tor or a VPN if they're sending something sensitive. It's a place for the stuff corporate PR teams want buried.

The site backs up its anecdotal leak reports with hard numbers from established layoff trackers. It references Layoffs.fyi, founded by Roger Lee, which has tracked over 260,000 tech employee layoffs across more than 1,000 companies since 2020. TrueUp provides additional data. These sources give statistical weight to the individual stories of AI-driven job displacement that appear in AI Huynya's live feed.

The operators remain completely anonymous. No names, no corporate ties, no locations. But their linguistic choices offer clues. The site's name draws from Russian slang, and they run a Telegram channel broadcasting AI failures, hallucinations, and layoffs in Ukrainian. That mix points to an Eastern European team using regional language quirks to critique the global AI industry's excesses.

The site is blunt by design. While AI companies pump out optimistic press releases, AI Huynya collects the failures and worker harm that don't make it into earnings calls. It cuts against the hype, and its existence suggests there's an audience hungry for unfiltered accounts of how AI integration actually goes wrong.