logo
Malaysia couple travel hours to tour site after watching AI-created video, unaware it's unreal

Malaysia couple travel hours to tour site after watching AI-created video, unaware it's unreal

A Malaysian couple travelled for three hours from Kuala Lumpur to the country's state of Perak to visit a tourist spot that exists only in an artificial intelligence (AI)-generated video.
On June 30, a member of staff at a hotel in Perak state posted on social media that an elderly couple checked in and asked her about a scenic cable car that runs locally.
The staff member who uses the name @dyaaaaaaa._ said she thought they were joking and told them the cable car attraction did not exist. She told them there was nothing to see in the quiet town.
The artificial intelligence-generated 'journalist' reports from her unreal broadcast van. Photo: Facebook/Nurul Afzarina Mokhtar
Apparently, the couple did not believe her and said they saw a video online that features a television host experiencing the service herself and interviewing people about their journeys.
The woman staff member explained that what they saw was an AI-generated video.
The video, which has now been taken down reportedly due to the controversy and reports from users, shows a glamorous female host with a channel called 'TV Rakyat' reporting about the fun tram ride, Kuak Skyride, located in the town of Kuak Hulu in Perak.
The host takes the ride and enjoys the forests and mountains.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

John Lee vows to make Hong Kong ‘preferred destination' after 12% surge in tourists
John Lee vows to make Hong Kong ‘preferred destination' after 12% surge in tourists

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

John Lee vows to make Hong Kong ‘preferred destination' after 12% surge in tourists

Hong Kong leader John Lee Ka-chiu has pledged to adopt innovative thinking to make the city a 'preferred travel destination', following a 12 per cent increase in tourist arrivals during the first half of the year. Latest figures by the Hong Kong Tourism Board showed that the city welcomed about 3.48 million visitors in June, bringing the total number from January to June to more than 23.6 million, a 12 per cent year-on-year increase. Three-quarters of the arrivals, or 17.8 million, came from mainland China. The board said on Saturday that about 5.84 million visitors arrived from the rest of the world, marking a 17 per cent increase compared with the same period last year. 'Visitors from most short-haul markets, including Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and the Philippines, increased by at least 25 per cent year on year,' it said. 'Among long-haul markets, Australia recorded a notable growth of 33 per cent year on year.' In a Facebook post, Lee attributed the tourism boom partly to a string of arts, cultural and sports mega-events. He also pointed to the opening of Kai Tak Sports Park, the city's newest hub for world-class concerts and sporting events.

As AI gets more powerful, humans and human values must remain in charge
As AI gets more powerful, humans and human values must remain in charge

South China Morning Post

time3 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

As AI gets more powerful, humans and human values must remain in charge

Two stylistically distinct films were shown in Chinese cinemas this summer, each depicting a future dominated by artificial intelligence (AI). As the franchise finale, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning revisits past missions, showcasing how deadly weapons that threaten humanity have evolved – from viruses and nuclear weapons to AI, now cast not merely as a tool but the villain's accomplice, even the puppet master. Meanwhile, Ghost in the Shell , the 1995 anime film enjoying a 30th anniversary rescreening, offers a more philosophical approach, exploring the blurred line between humans and AI through a cyborg's existential quest, repeatedly asking: Who am I? Both films reflect different anxieties over the rapid rise of AI: the fear of losing control and a deeper unease about the erosion of human subjectivity. In a future of human-machine symbiosis, if AI surpasses to become an equal or superior presence, can human-centred values still hold? This year, tech giants including OpenAI, Anthropic and Google rolled out AI agents back-to-back, built to automate end-to-end workflows with minimal human input. Heralding AI agents as 'the next giant breakthrough', OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has overseen two landmark releases this year. While Operator helps users fill out forms, order groceries and even complete purchases, Deep Research is designed to carry out complex, multi-step analyses at the level of a research analyst, completing in 'tens of minutes' what would take a human 'many hours'.

Why for one Liverpool fan, the ‘You'll Never Walk Alone' team anthem means a little more
Why for one Liverpool fan, the ‘You'll Never Walk Alone' team anthem means a little more

South China Morning Post

time4 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Why for one Liverpool fan, the ‘You'll Never Walk Alone' team anthem means a little more

Ang has never travelled to Anfield for a live match, but spent about 6,000 Malaysian ringgit (US$1,423) on a ticket, hotel and airfare to come to Hong Kong. 'I felt as though whenever I was watching a Liverpool match, my boyfriend was there with me, and that was what 'You'll Never Walk Alone' meant to me.' 'My first match with him was the 7-0 win over Manchester United [in March] … but he passed away due to heart failure later in the year – there were no symptoms,' she said. 'Since then, I have become a more devoted and dedicated Reds fan. Ang, 26, actually started following football by watching Italy's Serie A and supporting AC Milan in 2022. However, the teacher in her native country began to read more about the Merseyside team because of her boyfriend, who had been supporting the Reds for more than 20 years. Vinie Ang Weng-nee, a Reds fan since early 2023, flew in from Malaysia to pursue her first overseas tour to watch the club. Among the thousands of Liverpool fans who flocked to Kai Tak Stadium to watch Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, Dominik Szoboszlai and other favourites train on Thursday was one for whom the words 'You'll Never Walk Alone' resonate especially strongly. 'It's easier coming here than to visit the United Kingdom, but I will go to Anfield eventually this year or next,' she said. 'I decided to come when the trip was announced earlier in the year.' But there was another reason Ang had decided to come to Hong Kong. 'The reason for my trip was really [Diogo] Jota,' she said, speaking about the Portuguese star who died in a car crash a few weeks ago. 'He's the first Liverpool player [other than Salah] I knew, and I really liked him. 'I was so looking forward to seeing him, he's an intelligent and down-to-earth player … I was devastated to hear about his passing away, and I am still emotional [speaking to you now].' Ang was just one of thousands of Liverpool fans of all ages seen making their way to Kai Tak Stadium from the nearby Sung Wong Toi and Kai Tak Mass Transit Railway (MTR) stations hours before the open training session. Fans donning Reds' jerseys – home, away or even their third – with more recent players' names made up most of the bigger numbers, with names such as the undisputed king, Salah, to recent additions such as Darwin Nunez. Some female fans also showed love to Wataru Endo, only the second Japanese player in the club's 133-year history. Some players – Roberto Firmino or Trent Alexander-Arnold – might have left the team, but they remained in the fans' hearts, or on their jerseys at the very least. Some chose to honour and remember the late Jota. Thousands of Liverpool fans attended the training session at Kai Tak Stadium on Thursday. Photo: AFP For Liverpool fans, supporting the 20-time league champions could be described as a 'religious' thing. Mino Cheng Chan-kwong, chairman of the Official Liverpool Supporters Club Hong Kong, said the club was all about 'the human touch' for him. Having first watched the Reds in the early 1990s, Cheng said he was moved by the club's decision to honour the 97 fans who died in the Hillsborough disaster by updating the club's emblem. 'And then there was Jota, and immortalising his No 20 jersey … supporting Liverpool gives me a very strong feeling that we're all in one big family,' said the 43-year-old, who picked the 4-3 Premier League win over Newcastle in 1996 as his all-time favourite moment in three decades as a fan. 'It's almost like a religion. I also like AC Milan and I still do today, but the other teams are not comparable when it comes to the club motto, YNWA – that's how I feel.' Advertisement

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store