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#22
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03-03-2026, 09:19 PM
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Re: Man Riding a Snowmobile Crashes into a Snow-covered Pier and Dies
I've rode snowmobile quite a bit. This looks AI tbh. The jet wake around the snowmobile and dude, and its not solid ice it doesn't even look like the track is kicking shit up. And if that was solid icy conditions he would have been bobbing around a little more than that |
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#26
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03-04-2026, 05:17 PM
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Re: Man Riding a Snowmobile Crashes into a Snow-covered Pier and Dies
Although some viewers speculated that the video of the incident could have been created by artificial intelligence when it appeared online, the tragedy was confirmed by police. A reader of the largest regional newspaper of Lithuania Minor and Samogitia visited the scene the next morning. He shared photos showing the area where the snowmobile and driver landed is stained with blood. According to the witness, the accident site is about 40 meters from the pier, which is how far the motorcycle flew. He estimates that the snowmobile could have risen to a height of 15-20 meters during the flight. The photos also show that the motorcycle compressed the snow in front of the pier - a kind of springboard was formed, from which the vehicle took off. The victim was sober at the time of the accident. Police report that a pre-trial investigation has been launched into an incident in which a Lynx Commander 900 snowmobile crashed into a snow-covered embankment. The Lynx Commander 900 is one of the more powerful snowmobiles on the market. It is equipped with an 899 cubic centimeter Rotax engine. Depending on the modification, this type of motorcycle can reach speeds of about 140–160 km/h. Investigators are investigating all the circumstances of the incident. |
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#27
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03-04-2026, 07:02 PM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE FIRST CLASS Poster Rank:3869 Join Date: Sep 2024 Posts: 84 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 20 Post(s)
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Re: Man Riding a Snowmobile Crashes into a Snow-covered Pier and Dies
Oh boy. AI has got you in the pocket already, and we're not even that far along. May God protect you in the future because things will get more complicated.
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#28
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03-04-2026, 07:34 PM
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| My Rank: STAFF SERGEANT Poster Rank:836 Join Date: Jun 2017 Posts: 917 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 288 Post(s)
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Re: Man Riding a Snowmobile Crashes into a Snow-covered Pier and Dies
Speaking of idiocy on the ice, I live by one of the Great Lakes.This time of year we see the almost daily stories on the news of these douche nozzles who, like the moth drawn to the open flame, can't think of anything else to do but to wander on to the lake and get trapped when the ice breaks and leaves them stranded. If I was running the show, natural selection takes place. There would be no more rescues. And what I really don't understand is these people laughing and waving for the cameras when the Coast Guard brings them in. I would be hiding my face like someone arrested for murder.
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#29
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03-05-2026, 11:54 AM
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Re: Man Riding a Snowmobile Crashes into a Snow-covered Pier and Dies
(sigh(2)): THANK you for that, definitely: score another for (still-)human sleuthing, very encouraging. RANT: Looks to increasingly be time though, to double-think and maybe not bother to comment on potentially suspect content overmuch (except to note that possibility) until after veracity has been settled? Dunno how that could work, given how threads have historically evolved and petered out... For me at least, AI/its potential presence is harshing my enjoyment of things on this site, maybe somewhat like jerking off but later being unsure if you've actually cum or not? It's so unfortunate that the level/effort of proof and the scope-of-need over a hugely wider range and staggeringly higher output (even of formerly more 'mundane' media) appears to now be so much greater, to sustain relevance. But not (or bot) to worry: as AI progressively makes EVERYTHING suspect, eventually humans will get worn down and just stop noticing or caring (and/or may lose baseline access to sufficiently objective tools for even determining) if such things are real or not. If past, more 'organic' media behavior such as the rise of reality TV and the 'nobody reads the retractions' phenomena are useful previews, at least. |