Tag Archives: Bogus

Largest review ever into menopause care reveals the treatments that DO work – and the ones that are bogus – Daily Mail

  1. Largest review ever into menopause care reveals the treatments that DO work – and the ones that are bogus Daily Mail
  2. Rethinking menopause: Experts call for individualized treatment and more research News-Medical.Net
  3. Misinformation preventing women from getting effective menopause treatment, study finds The Guardian
  4. Misinformation preventing women from effective menopause treatment ABC News
  5. World-renowned menopause experts summarize the state of menopause knowledge and advocate for further research News-Medical.Net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Lawyers blame ChatGPT for tricking them into citing bogus case law – ABC News

  1. Lawyers blame ChatGPT for tricking them into citing bogus case law ABC News
  2. Lawyers blame ChatGPT for tricking them, U.S. judge sees red | Age of AI & our human future | WION WION
  3. ‘Humiliated’ NY lawyer who used ChatGPT for ‘bogus’ court doc profusely apologizes New York Post
  4. Lawyer Who Used ChatGPT Faces Penalty for Made Up Citations The New York Times
  5. Top Tech News Today: Lawyer Who Forged Citations by Using ChatGPT was Penalized. Regulators Cast Doubt on the Future of the Cryptocurrency Market in the United States. Analytics Insight
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Square Enix Blockbuster Touts Bogus Accolades In Launch Trailer

Screenshot: Square Enix

Everything about the leadup to the release of Forspoken, Square Enix’s big new open-world action RPG, has been a lowkey mess. But you wouldn’t know that from the launch trailer which stays upbeat on the modern-day magical adventure by taking a bunch of words out of context and spinning them into deceitful accolades.

“This Forspoken launch trailer is kind of telling us that the game might not actually be that good and here’s how I know,” trailer editing aficionado Derek Lieu said in a TikTok video that blew up over the weekend. “The biggest red flag are these quotes which are either one word long or two words long.”

He proceeded to go through each phrase flashed on screen during it, found the original source it was from, and read the larger context aloud. In almost every instance the meaning was very different from the way the words were presented in the trailer, and not intended to be taken as unambiguous praise.

In one example, Square Enix lifted the word “Beautiful” from a December preview published over at Distractify. In context, however, the quote wasn’t saying that Forspoken was beautiful but that it had the “potential” to be a “beautiful story-driven game that will pull at your heartstrings with each new chapter.” It was, after all, a preview and not a review of the final game, though the site’s editor said she didn’t take issue with how the word was used.

“Square Enix did ask for permission to use the quote, and we did approve,” Distractify gaming editor, Sara Belcher, told Kotaku in an email. “In our actual review, I do refer to the game as ‘beautiful’ (that was my opinion of the game’s world since the preview, which is why I didn’t personally feel the quote felt out of context). We do not charge for the use of quotes in promotional materials.”

In another example, the Final Fantasy maker quotes the word “impressive” from Game Informer. The only problem is that the word in question doesn’t even come from a hands-on preview, but from a news write-up of a gameplay trailer from a Sony State of Play. “Frey’s traversal abilities are impressive, allowing for fast movement in and out of combat, both in aerial and aquatic situations,” it reads.

To recap then, Forspoken’s newest trailer included a truncated quote of someone describing one of its older trailers. Game Informer’s actual review gave the game a 7.5 out of 10. It did not include the word impressive, instead describing main protagonist Frey’s overall adventure as “[not] without its highlights.”

Game Informer did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Lieu told Kotaku that the intent of the video wasn’t to claim that he thinks the game is or will be bad, but rather that the misleading framing heavily implies that Square Enix wasn’t confident enough in the game to let it stand on its own without the bogus accolades.

“They could be entirely wrong taking this approach and the game is actually good, or has merits they could be focusing on instead of looking for quotes,” he said. “So I think it says more about the people in charge of marketing the game than it does the game itself.”

Companies relying on misleading quotes from critics and review outlets is nothing new. Sometimes they remove the original context. Sometimes they just search for any source, whether it’s reputable or not, that says your game is awesome. Almost always the accolades themselves are in giant fonts while the publications they’re pulled from are too small to read unless you’re taking time to analyze them in a TikTok video like Lieu.

As a point of comparison, he also shared two Forpsoken trailers that make the game look appealing without resorting to lies. The first was a trailer for the demo released last month. The second was a recut of an existing social media trailer that was repeatedly roasted online for its Joss Whedon-style fourth-wall-breaking dialogue.

“The real problem isn’t the narration at all, it’s that they don’t lean hard enough into the tone the narration should be selling and i know that because i proved it just now to be sure,” wrote Twitter user spellbang who took the same ingredients but remixed them in a way that looked much cooler while retaining the sensibility of the original.

The artistry behind making a good video game trailer aside, lying is bad and companies shouldn’t do that. It’s bad enough when a trailer full of pre-baked footage masks, say, how poorly a game actually runs. It’s even worse, though, when companies go out of their way to try and rope independent media outlets into their deceit. Publishers are supposed to get permission before using other people’s quotes in their marketing, and to be transparent about how they will be used.

Square Enix did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

               



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Herschel Walker Flashes Seemingly Bogus Police Badge at Debate Against Raphael Warnock

At Friday’s crucial Georgia senate race debate, all eyes were on how anti-abortion hardliner Herschel Walker would defend himself against Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock after an explosive report by The Daily Beast this month uncovered that Walker had paid an ex-girlfriend to have an abortion in 2009.

The last-second bombshell dropped in a tight neck race that could ultimately decide which party controls the Senate—the latest in a long list of scandals which have rocked the ex-football player’s campaign. Walker and his campaign have continuously denied the accusations of the abortion payment.

But on Friday, Walker was given a pass by his opponent Raphael Warnock, who never pressed the Republican on the accusation.

Instead, another claim by Walker grabbed attention of viewers across the country: the moment when he broke debate rules by holding up an alleged police badge in response to a zinger by Warnock.

“One thing I have not done—I have never pretended to be a police officer. And I’ve never threatened a shootout with the police,” Warnock shot at Walker in one of the more tense moments of the debate.

In response, the Republican whipped a large black badge with a gold star out of his breast pocket for only a brief moment.

“I am work (sic) with many police officers,” he exclaimed.

It was the latest of many hints from Walker that he worked as a law enforcement agent, despite no real evidence that this has ever been the case, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

At the debate, the moderator quickly jumped on the candidate for breaking the rules of the exchange by producing a prop.

“It’s not a prop,” Walker doubled down. “It’s real.”

The moment led, naturally, from incredulity to all-out internet trolling of the viral moment.

“In fairness to Herschel Walker, I sometimes pull out my Star Fleet badge to get past security at Star Trek conferences,” wrote George Takei, an actor in Star Trek, on Twitter.

Many also likened the moment to child-like make-believe.

“Just like Herschel Walker, I’ve also gone around flashing a toy badge and pretending to be a sheriff. Then I turned 5,” read a tweet from the Palmer Report.

“Herschel Walker whipping out a fake badge and calling himself a police fiver is like my kid calling himself a ‘pilot’ because the actual pilots handed him a wings pin and showed him the cockpit,” wrote Elie Mystal, a correspondent for The Nation.

One meme-maker also leaned into film and TV, superimposing Walker into classics like The X-Files and Tombstone.

Walker has claimed to work in both local and federal law enforcement multiple times over the years, including claiming that he worked as a police officer, and as having trained with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

There is some evidence that he may have at least planned on attending a training course at Quantico, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, but he would require a college degree if he was an FBI agent, which he does not have.

The Walker campaign provided Associated Press stories from 1989 where Walker himself referenced doing an obstacle course with other FBI recruits to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

A request by The Daily Beast for further corroboration of his attending the FBI course were not immediately answered by the Walker campaign.

In a post-debate interview with News Nation, Walker produced the badge once again—which Leland Vittert read as from Johnson County. And Walker repeated a past defense, which was that he was “joking” about being an FBI agent, and that he “never said I went out to do anything” but has “worked with” many county law enforcement agencies.

The Johnson County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to attempts by The Daily Beast to confirm the validity of the badge.

Previously, Walker’s campaign told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution he was an honorary deputy in Cobb County, Georgia as well as three other unnamed counties, but neither the Cobb County police or sheriff’s departments were able to support the claim.

An honorary badge ”gives you absolutely no law enforcement authority,” former DeKalb County District Attorney J. Tom Morgan told The Atlanta Constitution-Journal.

“It’s like a junior ranger badge.”

Walker’s campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment from The Daily Beast.



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Elon Musk’s ‘best’ Twitter offer looks bogus

The Elon Musk-Twitter drama keeps taking sometimes bizarre, unexpected turns so whatever I write here could be moot not long after the ink dries. 

It’s always been dangerous to talk in absolutes about Musk. He is said to be genius-level smart but he’s done some really dumb things (weird tweets nearly got him jammed up for libel and caused him problems with the Securities and Exchange Commission). His baby, the electric-car giant Tesla, was woefully mismanaged, plagued by production issues, and nearly declared bankruptcy. It miraculously survived and came back stronger, making him the world’s richest man.

More recently, he famously put down a “best and final” offer for financially shaky yet ubiquitous social media company Twitter. The price: $44 billion or $54.20 a share (which included a pot reference; “4:20” is the “time to toke” in weed-smoking culture). It was a hefty premium to its stock price then and even heftier now after the market sell-off.

Twitter’s board ultimately realized that Crazy Elon was offering a once-in-lifetime payday for its beleaguered investors and took the deal.

Musk was on the verge of buying what he called the world’s public square. He would be the king of all media by taking Twitter private and fixing its manifold business flaws (for all its influence, it has no cash flow and no earnings).

Until suddenly he wasn’t.

Somewhere along the line, he got into his head that he was overpaying for a dog with fleas. He put the deal on hold indefinitely. His hardly believable reason for threatening to walk: There are too many fake accounts on Twitter that can’t be monetized by him or anyone else. He also said Twitter was hiding this bot problem, something tantamount to fraud. He wants to take a deeper look at the books.

Elon Musk has said he is worried about the large amounts of fake accounts on Twitter.
JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images

If he were really worried about bots, he wouldn’t have waived due diligence before signing the deal paperwork.

What’s next? The business press has always been skeptical about Musk’s intentions because most of Wall Street has been skeptical. That’s why the stock never traded close to his offer price. 

For what it’s worth, here’s the viewpoint of two bankers, one who has worked with his Tesla board, and another at a firm involved in his Twitter financing machinations.

Only on his terms

They say virtually the same thing. Musk is telling people he still wants Twitter. He thinks he can make it work as a private company, clean up the bot problem and sell it at a profit sometime in the next five years.

But Musk wants the company (like everything else) on his terms, which are always in flux. He doesn’t read balance sheets but goes by his gut and has no issue with flouting conventional banker norms (i.e. your word is your bond) to get his prize. His gut told him to waive due diligence. It’s now telling him that even though he signed a deal leaving him on the hook for the $1 billion breakup fee and maybe more in damages, he can get Twitter to the table and agree to his terms, aka a much lower purchase price.

He might be right. Twitter first said it would enforce the initial deal terms, maybe even go to court, but now appears to be playing ball with Musk. It recently said it will turn over more data on its bot issue — a move that means talks are back on. The bankers tell me the Twitter board knows that finding another suitor will be difficult even at around the $40 a share it’s trading at now. The board can’t just accept anything, but also can’t tell Musk to just pound sand.

Elon Musk could lose $1 billion if his Twitter deal falls out.
Patrick Pleul/Pool Photo via AP, File

So the thinking among my two guys is that Twitter agrees to a lower price, possibly significantly lower, and Crazy Elon gets his public square, albeit for much cheaper.

That means the deal is on, right? Seems so. But no one really knows with Crazy Elon.

Gensler goes gaga 

Left-wing SEC chief Gary Gensler finally announced last week his intentions to overhaul the stock market. Forget about the pretty good deal small investors get now: zero-commission trades and mobile apps that make stock trading seamless and inexpensive for newbies.

Securities and Exchange Commission Gary Gensler is chasing after retail “meme” stock investors.
Samuel Corum – CNP / MEGA

Gensler told attendees at an investor conference that bad stuff is happening where no one can see it; too many trades aren’t going to public exchanges. They’re being routed to private trading venues known as dark pools. Investors believe they’re trading for free on Robinhood but could be getting ripped off without knowing it.

Gensler offered no data to show that markets are screwing small investors through its current structure. It’s his hunch.

Upending the markets on a hunch is pretty dangerous stuff. Particularly when you’re simply trying to burnish your class-warfare credentials, as most observers suspect. The good news (and bad news for Gensler): His proposed changes will probably take years to implement as Congress — which will likely be in GOP hands after November — debates their merits.

By that time, it’ll all be over. His current boss, Sleepy Joe Biden, will likely be out of office, replaced by a Republican president or a sober-minded Democrat who will resist “fixing” something that doesn’t need fixing.

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Florida Couple Gets Busted With Bogus Vaccine Cards

Photo: Robyn Beck (Getty Images)

A quick PSA for unvaccinated folks looking for a weekend getaway: if you try forging your records to travel, you might wind up with a hefty fine instead.

That’s what happened to one Florida couple that was arrested after they stepped off the plane in Honolulu last week. NBC Miami first reported that the pair —43-year-old Enzo Dalmazzo and 31-year-old Daniela Dalmazzo—were both charged with violating Hawaii’s Safe Travels mandates by falsifying their vaccine cards. On top of that, Daniella was slapped with two additional charges for submitting additional fake docs for each of their kids.

Those kids, it’s worth mentioning, were 4 and 5 years old—far too young to get vaccinated (at least right now). Despite the fact that many domestic airlines would let them board anyway, their parents decided to pass the pair off as two vaccinated 12-year-olds instead, with vaccine cards to prove it.

But because five-year-olds and 12-year-olds look pretty darn different, airport authorities decided to look into the authenticity of their cards. “The screener at the airport, when they came through, noticed an anomaly about the age of the children and the vaccine, and that’s how we got involved,” a representative with the Hawaii Attorney General told NBC.

Where the couple got those cards is still an open question. Earlier this week, the Department of Justice charged a Chicago pharmacist who was alleged to have sold over vaccine cards over eBay, just a month after the agency caught a California-based homeopathic doctor selling blank cards to her patients.

Violating any of Hawaii’s COVID-19 protocols is classified as a misdemeanor by local authorities and one that can saddle tourists with fines of up to $5,000 or a year-long jail sentence. Hawaiian news outlets reported that the Dalmazzo’s shared an $8,000 fine and posted bail. Hopefully, they’ll consider actually getting the free jab before their next family vacation.

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