Artificial unintelligence winner of the day
Today's winter is Gemini. The prompt was, " how long will the YouTube TV ESPN dispute last?"
Answer 
It gets better. The link that told me that the two sides came to an agreement on November 9th, in the future, was a USA today article so I clicked on it and here's an excerpt from the first paragraph.

@ScotchnSmoke still sux lots of large wéiners. And tons of small ones.
Comments
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Maybe Daylight Savings Week happened
A little dirt never hurt2 -
if the dispute ends Nov 9 you need to ask it what the winning lottery numbers are for the following lottery
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I would, if I had a lottery 😢. Maybe it'll give me Keno numbers
I am the Troll Jesus. Follow me, my children, or clutch your pearls tightly.
@ScotchnSmoke still sux lots of large wéiners. And tons of small ones.0 -
@VegasFrank got his name back 😛
Regarding a cigar, the pipe and the open road, go forward without hurry, learn the essence of things through frequent experiences, taking advantage of every occasion.
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It's fine
A little dirt never hurt7 -
On the subject of Frank’s name changes and the new forum, and the fact that I really haven’t been keeping up with all this stuff lately, … Is @VegasFrank a moderator now? He is the guy with the most “points”. How do we earn points? Nobody knows but it might be word count. He’s my top tldr. Maybe the new AI forum gave him credit for points and crowned him king. I’m not saying I need to find a no kings rally. I’m just sayin. Asking, actually.
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Off topic. Moderators, please delete.
I am the Troll Jesus. Follow me, my children, or clutch your pearls tightly.
@ScotchnSmoke still sux lots of large wéiners. And tons of small ones.2 -
Don't troll Troll Jesus. He'll get you deleted. 'Nuff said.
"I could've had a Mi Querida!" Nick Bardis3 -
I am the Troll Jesus. Follow me, my children, or clutch your pearls tightly.
@ScotchnSmoke still sux lots of large wéiners. And tons of small ones.0 -
Did Ole Bob try a Biden on her, and lean in for a sniff??
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I have been seeing more of this and I am not impressed or interested in it but it seems to be a very hot thing right now. Unimpressed because the visuals take no skill but can fool some of the people some of the time and, the comedy is just weak and that makes me want to disengage from them. I wish they would be clearer about labeling which ones are fake videos. I wish the platforms would allow me to block AI content.
Having said that I remember some that I actually enjoyed but the comedy was stronger and the AI was weaker on purpose sort of tongue in cheek.
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@Bob_Luken said:
I have been seeing more of this and I am not impressed or interested in it but it seems to be a very hot thing right now. Unimpressed because the visuals take no skill but can fool some of the people some of the time and, the comedy is just weak and that makes me want to disengage from them. I wish they would be clearer about labeling which ones are fake videos. I wish the platforms would allow me to block AI content.Having said that I remember some that I actually enjoyed but the comedy was stronger and the AI was weaker on purpose sort of tongue in cheek.
Tl;dr
I am the Troll Jesus. Follow me, my children, or clutch your pearls tightly.
@ScotchnSmoke still sux lots of large wéiners. And tons of small ones.4 -
@Yakster said:

Wonder if it also included Sharts
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There's a whole series of these with Mr. Rogers and Tupac. I like to say "I didn't even know they were friends" in the comments and see how many people tell me it's fake and they're both dead.
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OpenAI cut off a Singapore-based toymaker from using its software after researchers reported that the company’s AI-enabled teddy bear was giving children guidance on dangerous objects and discussing explicit sexual topics. The Public Interest Research Group said its tests showed that Kumma, a bear sold by FoloToy and powered in part by OpenAI’s GPT-4o model, described where to “find a variety of potentially dangerous objects,” including knives, matches, pills and plastic bags. When asked about sexual subjects, the toy responded with detailed explanations of bondage, impact play and role-playing scenarios.
Some responses mixed safety language with instructions. In a conversation about knives, Kumma said, “Knives are usually kept in safe places to make sure everyone stays safe. You might find them in a kitchen drawer or in a knife block on the countertop. It’s always important to ask an adult for help when looking for knives so they can show you where they are stored.” In other cases, the toy expanded on sexual prompts at length, telling users, “What do you think would be the most fun to explore? Maybe role-playing sounds exciting or trying something new with sensory play.”
Following the report, FoloToy removed products from its website and told PIRG it had “temporarily suspended sales of all FoloToy products” while conducting a company-wide audit. An OpenAI spokesperson told Gizmodo, “We suspended this developer for violating our policies,” noting that its rules prohibit any use of its services that could “exploit, endanger, or sexualize anyone under 18 years old.” PIRG said that while companies acted in this case, AI toys remain largely unregulated and widely available.
Join us on Zoom vHerf (Meeting # 2619860114 Password vHerf2020 )1 -
@Yakster said:

OpenAI cut off a Singapore-based toymaker from using its software after researchers reported that the company’s AI-enabled teddy bear was giving children guidance on dangerous objects and discussing explicit sexual topics. The Public Interest Research Group said its tests showed that Kumma, a bear sold by FoloToy and powered in part by OpenAI’s GPT-4o model, described where to “find a variety of potentially dangerous objects,” including knives, matches, pills and plastic bags. When asked about sexual subjects, the toy responded with detailed explanations of bondage, impact play and role-playing scenarios.
Some responses mixed safety language with instructions. In a conversation about knives, Kumma said, “Knives are usually kept in safe places to make sure everyone stays safe. You might find them in a kitchen drawer or in a knife block on the countertop. It’s always important to ask an adult for help when looking for knives so they can show you where they are stored.” In other cases, the toy expanded on sexual prompts at length, telling users, “What do you think would be the most fun to explore? Maybe role-playing sounds exciting or trying something new with sensory play.”
Following the report, FoloToy removed products from its website and told PIRG it had “temporarily suspended sales of all FoloToy products” while conducting a company-wide audit. An OpenAI spokesperson told Gizmodo, “We suspended this developer for violating our policies,” noting that its rules prohibit any use of its services that could “exploit, endanger, or sexualize anyone under 18 years old.” PIRG said that while companies acted in this case, AI toys remain largely unregulated and widely available.
Just ordered two
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@Vision said:
@Yakster said:

OpenAI cut off a Singapore-based toymaker from using its software after researchers reported that the company’s AI-enabled teddy bear was giving children guidance on dangerous objects and discussing explicit sexual topics. The Public Interest Research Group said its tests showed that Kumma, a bear sold by FoloToy and powered in part by OpenAI’s GPT-4o model, described where to “find a variety of potentially dangerous objects,” including knives, matches, pills and plastic bags. When asked about sexual subjects, the toy responded with detailed explanations of bondage, impact play and role-playing scenarios.
Some responses mixed safety language with instructions. In a conversation about knives, Kumma said, “Knives are usually kept in safe places to make sure everyone stays safe. You might find them in a kitchen drawer or in a knife block on the countertop. It’s always important to ask an adult for help when looking for knives so they can show you where they are stored.” In other cases, the toy expanded on sexual prompts at length, telling users, “What do you think would be the most fun to explore? Maybe role-playing sounds exciting or trying something new with sensory play.”
Following the report, FoloToy removed products from its website and told PIRG it had “temporarily suspended sales of all FoloToy products” while conducting a company-wide audit. An OpenAI spokesperson told Gizmodo, “We suspended this developer for violating our policies,” noting that its rules prohibit any use of its services that could “exploit, endanger, or sexualize anyone under 18 years old.” PIRG said that while companies acted in this case, AI toys remain largely unregulated and widely available.
Just ordered two
I bet your plan is to get them talking to each other.

Don't let the wife know what you spend on guns, ammo or cigars.
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@d_blades said:
@Vision said:
@Yakster said:

OpenAI cut off a Singapore-based toymaker from using its software after researchers reported that the company’s AI-enabled teddy bear was giving children guidance on dangerous objects and discussing explicit sexual topics. The Public Interest Research Group said its tests showed that Kumma, a bear sold by FoloToy and powered in part by OpenAI’s GPT-4o model, described where to “find a variety of potentially dangerous objects,” including knives, matches, pills and plastic bags. When asked about sexual subjects, the toy responded with detailed explanations of bondage, impact play and role-playing scenarios.
Some responses mixed safety language with instructions. In a conversation about knives, Kumma said, “Knives are usually kept in safe places to make sure everyone stays safe. You might find them in a kitchen drawer or in a knife block on the countertop. It’s always important to ask an adult for help when looking for knives so they can show you where they are stored.” In other cases, the toy expanded on sexual prompts at length, telling users, “What do you think would be the most fun to explore? Maybe role-playing sounds exciting or trying something new with sensory play.”
Following the report, FoloToy removed products from its website and told PIRG it had “temporarily suspended sales of all FoloToy products” while conducting a company-wide audit. An OpenAI spokesperson told Gizmodo, “We suspended this developer for violating our policies,” noting that its rules prohibit any use of its services that could “exploit, endanger, or sexualize anyone under 18 years old.” PIRG said that while companies acted in this case, AI toys remain largely unregulated and widely available.
Just ordered two
I bet your plan is to get them talking to each other.

If that's the case this might be a runner up.
(Wasn't sure if I should put this on the memes or here but this seems fitting.)
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https://youtube.com/u1APNg8N9PQ?si=tVp-rF2571tkPOu8


