The general election has been declared. Now we all need to make sure we are not being misled by misinformation, and then get ...
The slop can have a real-world impact. On Thursday, thousands of people in Dublin, Ireland were reportedly duped into visiting a non-existent Halloween parade after seeing AI-generated ads that spread ...
Some of this information is dressed up as news, delivered via platforms that look like news platforms. We are programmed to ...
Adding to New York's claim to Irish fame is a new study from HelloFresh Ireland, which pinpointed the 25 global cities ... St ...
Nazir Ali admitted that artificial intelligence was used to create the post about the parade in Dublin, but insisted he and ...
A Paul Mescal lookalike contest will be held in Ireland this week in a bid to find more men wearing ... Mescal’s doppelganger competition will take place at Smithfield Square in Dublin on 7 November ...
Thousand of people in Dublin, Ireland lined a busy street on Halloween night for a parade that never happened. Video footage ...
Thousands of people who gathered together for a parade on the streets of Dublin were left confused when they discovered the ...
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter On the weekend before the election, both candidates were busy. Kamala Harris was on SNL ...
Thousands of people were tricked by an AI generated Pakistan based website after it falsely promoted a Halloween parade in ...
MySpiritHalloween, the website that promoted a Halloween parade in Dublin that never existed, says it is “ashamed” and blamed human error.
Thousands of people were disappointed and confused when they learned the Halloween parade they were crowding around for never actually existed.