>"My wife of 12 years occasionally gets involved in various fads that develop around us. In the past few months, as part of a viral trend, she made me two Greek coffees and told me that "for a laugh" after drinking them, we should take a picture of the cups and ask chatGPT to tell us the cup. Not wanting to spoil her fun, I agreed to participate in her game. The result of the analysis of my own coffee was that she sees a young girl with the initial E, whom I supposedly think about intensely and my desire for a relationship with her will come true. Correspondingly, in her own coffee, the conclusion of the "science" was that I am cheating on her with some young woman who intends to close the house on us. I considered it unnecessary to explain that this is non-existent nonsense and laughed"
>The husband's lawyer, Phoebus Stroungaris, in turn spoke to ANT1 about the incident, stating, among other things, that he will suggest that he file a lawsuit to have custody of their two minor children revoked.
>"My client is innocent until proven guilty. The absurdity of artificial intelligence cannot stand up in a court of law."
>There’s something behind this. If we consider that the main character wanted to believe that he was cheating on her but couldn’t prove it, suddenly the AI was there to tell her.”
Bereits beim
>My wife occasionally gets involved in various fads that develop around us
war es vorbei.