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, ...
Attendees said they felt hornswoggled by the happening, a la the notorious Fyre Festival, a so-called luxury musical event ...
AI slop sites — also known as AI chum — are websites that owners fill with AI-produced content (typically of poor or no ...
Thousands of people who gathered together for a parade on the streets of Dublin were left confused when they discovered the ...
An SEO agency owner says he is “very depressed” after one of his AI-assisted Halloween parade listings misled revelers in ...
The owner of a Pakistan-based website which shared details of a non-existent Halloween parade in Dublin says it was "a ...
THE fake Halloween parade shambles and the lack of garda intelligence around it shows how easily Ireland could be attacked, a ...
Nazir Ali admitted that artificial intelligence was used to create the post about the parade in Dublin, but insisted he and ...
MySpiritHalloween, the website that promoted a Halloween parade in Dublin that never existed, says it is “ashamed” and blamed human error.
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 error has been attributed to a "human mistake". A Pakistan-based company has issued an apology after mistakenly ...