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New York Times
29-05-2025
- Health
- New York Times
Fake My Run Is Exactly What It Sounds Like
By his own admission, Arthur Bouffard has always enjoyed dabbling in a healthy bit of mischief that blurs the lines between technology and reality. He found his sweet spot when he unveiled his latest project this month. Mr. Bouffard, 26, built a website called Fake My Run, which he described as 'truly a milestone in lazy technology innovation.' And it is exactly as advertised: a site that houses a program that produces, in exacting detail, complete with mapped routes, fraudulent runs that users can upload to online exercise-tracking services like Strava. When Pedro Duarte, the head of marketing for a software company, reposted a 42-second video by Mr. Bouffard on X that demonstrated the program's ease of use — and its apparent deviousness — Mr. Duarte spoke for the masses when he wrote: 'believe nothing. not even people's runs.' He added, 'insane, i hate it and i love it.' Which was exactly the point. Mr. Bouffard, who lives in The Hague, where he works as an augmented-reality developer, wanted people to feel conflicted. 'It's all very tongue-in-cheek,' he said. As an avid jogger, Mr. Bouffard had become familiar with certain trends in the running community — some more pernicious than others. He had noticed, for example, how often people would run marathons and immediately grab their phones so that they could upload their results to platforms like Strava. Because if a run does not exist on Strava or on social media, it might as well not exist at all. Even worse, Mr. Bouffard felt, was the trend in which people hire so-called Strava mules to do their runs for them as a way of gaining online clout without putting in any actual effort. (Yes, this is a real thing.) 'It made me think of how this whole hobby has become more and more performative,' Mr. Bouffard said. What, he wondered, had happened to jogging for the pleasure of it, without the need for outside validation? And in its own deeply subversive way, his website hints at some of the larger challenges that have taken root amid the rapid spread of technology like artificial intelligence: If people are willing to fake something as benign as a weekend run, what can any of us believe to be true anymore? Not much, apparently. 'I don't want people to think I'm just trying to cause trouble,' Mr. Bouffard said. 'I feel like I'm poking at a very real problem. But I can also see why people are interpreting it poorly.' Strava is not a fan of Mr. Bouffard's work. Brian Bell, a spokesman for the company, said in a statement that Strava had 'already taken steps to delete activities and ban accounts that have used Fake My Run.' Though Mr. Bell declined to specify how Strava is able to detect those accounts, Mr. Bouffard has a theory. 'I think they're using A.I. to analyze suspicious activities,' he said. Mr. Bouffard, who grew up in Paris, has a day job building 'digital immersive experiences' for clients, he said — filters for games, marketing stunts, virtual treasure hunts. But he also has pet projects. After identifying a vulnerability in a bike-sharing service based in France, he built a website that allowed users to monitor the locations of bikes throughout the service's network. 'They left it open without realizing that people could use this to track other people's movements, which could be problematic,' he said. 'I think they might've done some patches since then.' Fake My Run was created in the same vein, as a social good — sort of, kind of — in irreverent packaging. Think of it, perhaps, as Banksy-style performance art. Earlier this year, when Mr. Bouffard imported his running activity from Runkeeper, another GPS fitness-tracking tool, to Strava, he realized that he could edit the individual files — files that included pieces of information like GPS data, heart rate and average pace. It also occurred to him that people were paying for Strava mules when those activities could more easily be fabricated. 'Maybe I can produce something that makes fun of that whole industry,' he recalled thinking. Mr. Bouffard soon had a working website, where users could design a route, generate a GPX file with detailed data, and download it 'in just one click.' When Mr. Bouffard tested out the program's efficacy for himself, he heard from friends almost immediately. 'They were like, 'Why are you running in Antarctica?' ' he recalled. Mr. Bouffard said that more than 200,000 people had visited his website since its inception and that about 500 had bought 'tokens' to generate fake runs. 'Way more than I expected,' he said, laughing. He charges a small fee, starting at 42 cents per file download. Still, he said, he does not consider it a 'business venture.' Platforms like Strava are a popular way for many people to track their exercise routines. Some also say that the platforms help keep them accountable. But problems can arise when people become too competitive as a result — when they flirt with injury by exercising too hard in ill-advised attempts to outperform friends or rise to the top of platform-based leader boards. Predictably, some have resorted to taking shortcuts, like hiring mules or riding electric bikes to complete their journeys in record time. Extreme? Sure. But it happens. Cliff Simpkins, 50, of Redmond, Wash., said that Mr. Bouffard's website resonated with him because of his family's experiences with Duolingo, the language-learning program. His three children, he said, resorted to taking English lessons on Duolingo to boost their rankings before it dawned on them that it was silly and counterproductive. 'It was a solid teachable moment with the kids when they realized the extent that they were going to 'compete' for the wake of gamification, completely leaving the learning experience behind,' Mr. Simpkins, who works in developer marketing, said. 'I love the original spirit of connection and helping support others, but it seems that it can turn ugly quick.' Duncan McCabe, an Ontario-based accountant and self-described 'Strava art' enthusiast, said it saddened him that people would post fake workouts on Strava. Last year, Mr. McCabe, 32, turned about 120 jogs over 10 months into a 27-second animation of a stick man running through the streets of Toronto. 'The impractical effort that goes into generating the art is what makes it interesting,' he said. 'Without the physical effort, it's just a digital Etch-A-Sketch.' For his own part, Mr. Bouffard has kept his own Strava account free of fraudulent activity, he said. (He has a burner account for creative purposes.) He offered a disclaimer that his website was solely for 'entertainment purposes' and that he did not want people to upload deceptive activities. 'You never know if they'll bring out an algorithm tomorrow and catch everyone,' he said. 'I can't be responsible for that.'
Yahoo
28-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Second Harvest Food Bank loses 1 million pounds of food due to federal cuts
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (WGHP) — A food bank in the Piedmont Triad is down on food donations due to federal cuts. 'Across 18 counties, including 332 food pantries. We're providing about 80% of the food they receive. The fact that we're going to get 1 million pounds less will impact what we get to them, which means those pantries will have less to provide to our neighbors in need,' Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina CEO Eric Aft said. Aft said the reason why nearly 1 million pounds of food is gone is because the Trump administration got rid of a U.S. Department of Agriculture program. 'The Commodity Credit Corporation funding, which is part of the federal commodities that we receive, was cut back in March,' Aft said. Aft said CCC funding made up for one-third of the food they provide. That's not the only federal funding the food bank has lost. Earlier this year, they also lost funding from the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program. 'That was approved back in October, but the administration said that would not continue. That is $2 million that we will not be receiving to purchase goods from area farmers,' Aft said. It's a loss that Aft said has not only hurt the food bank but will ultimately hurt thousands of food-insecure North Carolinians as well. 'There are sleepless nights. I had one last night. We're thinking about what are we going to do to respond to the need right now. That's just how we're existing,' Aft said. Aft said to make up for the nearly 1 million pounds of food, they're leaning on food drives, donations from viewers and grocery retailers Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
13-03-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Triad food banks, schools impacted by USDA cuts
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. WGHP) — Second Harvest Food Bank staff are tasked with feeding families in need in the northwestern portions of North Carolina This is an effort CEO Eric Aft says is made possible through a partnership with local farmers, specifically, the federally funded Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program. $900,000 of lottery revenue helps High Point school 'We aggregate … the produce as well as the meat and get that together and distribute that to our network partner programs. That includes over 300 food pantries in over 18 counties,' Aft said. The U.S Department of Agriculture cut more than $1 billion in federal funds for two programs. Aft says the cut makes the fight to end food insecurity in NC more complicated. Aft says eventually they'll no longer federally fund some of the farms in the Piedmont Triad. 'Glow House Agriculture … works with many farmers in the area … Another farmer that works with a lot of cattle. We get a lot of beef from them … There will be no more funding going forward. That's going to harm their ability and their work to provide food across the area,' Aft said. Farmers aren't the only ones impacted by federal cuts to nutrition programs. The School Nutrition Association, which represents cafeteria workers, said the USDA cut $660 million to the Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program this year. It's a cut Guilford County Schools Superintendent Dr. Whitney Oakley is keeping a close eye on. 'We know that there were cuts to the federal department as recently as yesterday evening. Programs that come federally include most of our special education funding school meals,' Oakley said FOX8 reached out to GCS to see which specific nutrition programs may be impacted. A spokesperson says they're waiting on direction from the North Carolina State Board of Education. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.