Remember a year or so ago we covered some fake Ebay coin some dubious video from ''coingecko'' published? Back then I was wondering if the finely tuned fake AI video world had entered the crypto world. Well, I wonder no more:
Just to be 100% clear, do not click on any of the provided links or scan any of their QR, it is 100% a scam. But the thing looks pretty realistic with little to no weird AI glitches. I mean, that Garlandhouse or whatever his name is always was a bit of a weirdo, so good luck trying to ''spot the weirdness'' in any of his videos. But all this is pretty concerning to say the least.
Ohh is that why you disabled the replies to your scam? Because of ''spam.''🙃
I wish there was a way to track how much money the average fake airdrop scam earns these scamming filth so we could compare it to how much this one will. Seeing is believing for most people right? I can imagine these will be a lot harder for people to spot than other scams. But who knows really, over the years hodlers have been duped so many times many will have grown weary when even their family members ask them about their coins. So is it really that big a deal?
I mean, the video is far from perfect of course but just the idea that we can soon no longer tell if we are seeing the real thing or AI should be pretty scary. Yet somehow, it is being curiously admired rather than feared. Like that scene from Apocalypto when the Europeans first arrived in the Americas, the natives were looking at the ships and the different looking people with curiosity. Well, guess what killed the cat.
Look man IDK, supercomputers, AI text to video, quantum computers etc. I'm sure a lot of it can be used for the good of the world as a whole. All I'm saying is imagine a situation were most people will have to remain confined to a certain space and rely on seeing each other via a screen rather than in real life, like say during a pandemic, and then the dangers these kind of videos can pose.