18Trust
Unreliable
🔍 Web Verified
Max LeibmanonMastodon1d ago
Microsoft’s terms of service said Copilot was “for entertainment purposes only.”
An Nvidia executive said AI is more expensive than humans.
Google argued in German court that everyone knows they can’t trust AI.
The tech industry has bet a trillion dollars on something they know doesn’t work.
Trust Metrics
15
12
25
25
Accuracy15%
Framing12%
Context25%
Tone25%
Analysis Summary
This post chains four unverified or false claims into a conspiracy narrative: that Microsoft labeled Copilot entertainment-only, Nvidia executives called AI uneconomical, Google told courts not to trust AI, and the entire tech industry knowingly invested $1 trillion in non-functional products. None of these statements are supported by evidence — in fact, current reporting shows Microsoft expanding Copilot commercially, BNP Paribas projecting improved commercialization, and Windows integrating AI as core product functionality. The post fabricates attributed statements and presents them as a unified pattern of hidden knowledge about AI failure.
Claims Analysis (4)
“Microsoft's terms of service said Copilot was 'for entertainment purposes only.'”
No accessible public source confirms this specific TOS language. Search results show Copilot in active commercial deployment and product development, contradicting entertainment-only designation.
“An Nvidia executive said AI is more expensive than humans.”
No search results returned a statement from any Nvidia executive making this claim. Statement is unverifiable without source attribution or date.
“Google argued in German court that everyone knows they can't trust AI.”
No search results found any German court case with this argument from Google. Specific legal proceeding cannot be verified.
“The tech industry has bet a trillion dollars on something they know doesn't work.”
Post conflates unverified anecdotes into a sweeping claim about industry-wide knowledge of failure. Search results show Copilot capabilities improving and commercialization progressing — direct contradiction of 'doesn't work' assertion.
⚠ Flags (1)
🚫 Fabricated Attribution
Was this analysis helpful?
Try ClearFeed free →