Anyone still clinging to the sinking ship that is Facebook has probably noticed the influx of low-quality A.I.-generated content that’s been flooding the site, posted almost exclusively by bizarrely named pages that exist solely to farm engagement. (For a better idea of how bad the issue has become, check out Boomers who think A.I. is real.)
While much of the A.I.-generated garbage on the site is designed to evoke pity — think disabled children holding signs that read, “It’s my birthday,” accompanied by pleas for commenters to wish these children, who, it must be stressed, do not exist, a happy birthday — there are others who are hoping to capture a hornier audience using images of A.I.-generated women. One such case is the page “Farmer Girl” that posts images of busty A.I.-generated female farmers, many of whom appear to be conjoined twins.
I love Facebook so much. The Malaysian flag, the misspelled watermark—it’s perfect pic.twitter.com/Ly6sXQ8FgG
— k (spring enjoyer) (@how_do_i_pdf) May 23, 2024
In the captions of these images aimed at elderly horndogs, you can find pleas to wish the nonexistent busty farmers a happy birthday, accompanied by dozens of hashtags of the names of some of the world’s most famous celebrities designed to drive people to the page.
Despite being obviously fake, the Farmer Girl page has 65,000 followers, and posts multiple times an hour, with every post featuring either A.I.-generated farmers begging for birthday wishes or for a husband: “I Need Husband I Am Farmer girlam from USA.” That’s the Malaysian flag, BTW.
While some of the images feature busty farmer women on their own, most feature two women, who are either identical twins or conjoined twins. Almost all of the women have inconceivably large racks, and literally none of the comments acknowledge how implausible any of this is. How many hot conjoined farmer babes do they think exist in the good old US of A?
It’s unclear who the target audience for these posts is — the page literally lists an address in India as its location, and most of the comments are from people whose profiles also list their locations as India, with the odd commenter from somewhere further afield like Kenya. Are all of these accounts just run by people working in bot farms, interacting with each other in the hopes of tricking some unsuspecting old person out of their money?
They might be in luck. Despite how ridiculous the page appears to someone who grew up with the internet, most of the posts feature comments from men who implore the owner of the page to message them. In fact, one such comment reads: “Shoot me a friend request I would like to be your owner either one of yours.”
Yikes.
6 Comments