Hong Kong – After a year of AI-generated content flooding digital spaces, audiences are developing a sharper radar for what’s synthetic and what’s real, pushing back against automation in favour of “Proof of Human”, according to a new report by Backslash, the cultural intelligence unit serving the agencies of Omnicom Advertising.
The annual report identifies global cultural shifts with the scale and longevity to shape the future of brands. This year, it points to culture’s growing demand for ‘Proof of Human’, highlighting why human presence is emerging as a key value signal.
According to the report, as AI content saturates digital life, audiences are gravitating back toward craft, provenance, and the messy human fingerprints that signal genuine care and effort.
Cecelia Girr, director of cultural strategy at Backslash and co-author of the report, said, “We’re entering a moment where output is cheap, but meaning is not. Technology can do more than ever before. The harder question is whether we want it to. In this next chapter, humanity itself becomes the differentiator.”
The report outlines six new cultural shifts that underscore this trend. One is the rise of private expression: as algorithms flatten taste, people are retreating to unique, one-of-a-kind spaces where meaning lives in what doesn’t scale. Another is “digital friction”, where, after decades of chasing seamlessness, culture increasingly values technology that introduces intentional limits and boundaries as a form of human preservation.
In an over-optimised world, struggle, risk, and discomfort are becoming aspirational again, offering the payoff of feeling fully alive. Audiences are also seeking experiences that deepen awareness and re-enchant the mind, countering the monotony of autopilot living.
The report further notes that after years of dismantling norms, total freedom can feel exhausting. Common codes of conduct are re-emerging as a path toward mutual respect.
Finally, culture is turning its attention to the control of digital footprints. The coming battle will revolve around what endures online, what gets erased, and who has access to our digital histories.
“In Asia, humanity has never been a branding exercise; it’s been a discipline. This is a region capable of extraordinary speed and scale, but rarely without structure, craft, and collective intent underneath. Even in its most accelerated markets, progress has tended to be engineered for the long term,” said Emmanuel Sabbagh, chief strategy officer at TBWA\Asia.
“Today, as audiences sharpen their instinct for what’s real, the opportunity for brands is clear: leadership won’t belong to those who automate the most, but to those who decide, with precision, what must remain unmistakably human. Cultural fluency – knowing when to scale and when to slow down – will separate enduring brands from the noise,” he added.
