Original Reddit post

Voidzilla billion dollar ai company was built on lies In the cash grab for patients eager to get on GLP-1 weight loss drugs like Ozempic, startups are getting so sloppy that their marketing materials look like unintentional parody. Consider MEDVi, an online prescription hub for GLP-1s. The company wants you to know that it’s “serious” about helping you lose weight, according to its website, which entreats visitors to join “50,000+ MEDVi patients” who have turned to the service for weight loss help. That help, it says, comes in the form of “personalized care” and “highly effective weight loss medications,” which it characterizes later as “doctor-approved.” At a subscription starting price of under $200 with “no insurance required,” it adds, it’s a “budget-friendly” semaglutide option. To drive its sales pitch home, MEDVi’s website is packed with images of happy-looking, smiling people; the women in the smoothed-over pictures each wear sports bras in trendy colors, while the grinning men are decked out in T-shirts. There’s also a slew of alleged customer success stories, which the company claims are from actual MEDVi patients. “Sometimes you have to see it to believe it,” reads a blurb of copy, alongside a series of bef0re-and-after weight loss photos. “GLP-1 medication can be life-changing and improves mood, sleep, energy and longevity. Photos, testimonials and results are from MEDVi patients.” Except, we couldn’t help but notice, none of these alleged patients are real. Each image in the smiling, sports-bra’d crowd appears to have been generated from scratch using AI — and the before-and-after photos, more insidiously, are eerily convincing deepfakes, seemingly generated by lifting existing images of real people from across the web and using AI to alter their faces. submitted by /u/AmorFati01

Originally posted by u/AmorFati01 on r/ArtificialInteligence