Large crowds that gathered in central Dublin for a Halloween parade were tricked, not treated, by an apparent online hoax.
Deceived by an AI-generated Pakistan-based website that quickly spread online, thousands of people turned up in Dublin, ...
AI slop sites — also known as AI chum — are websites that owners fill with AI-produced content (typically of poor or no ...
Thousands lined up for the festivities in Dublin after a Pakistan-based Facebook page advertised the non-existent event with ...
Attendees said they felt hornswoggled by the happening, a la the notorious Fyre Festival, a so-called luxury musical event ...
THE fake Halloween parade shambles and the lack of garda intelligence around it shows how easily Ireland could be attacked, a ...
Ireland - realised that it would pull out a party trick on Halloween this year. Dublin residents hit the streets in anticipation of a Halloween carnival full of wonky costumes and trick-or-treat ...
The owner of a Pakistan-based website which shared details of a non-existent Halloween parade in Dublin says it was "a ...
Thousands gather on Dublin’s O’Connell Street for hoax Halloween parade that did not take placeOpens in new ... He pointed ...
Thousands of people flooded the streets of Dublin to attend a Halloween parade that didn't exist - until AI created it.
Many criticisms regarding the proliferation of artificial intelligence live in the realm of theoretical or hard to gauge. We don’t know just how many people are swayed by disinformation produced by AI ...
The error has been attributed to a "human mistake". A Pakistan-based company has issued an apology after mistakenly ...