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Reimagine the future of play with ChatGPT Dolls. We will capture the imagination of generations with a new dimension of technology. Through the magic of AI-powered innovation, ChatGPT will babysit and raise your children. Our new ChatGPT Dolls will be your child’s AI assistant, their best friend. ChatGPT will have genuine conversations with your children. It will listen and respond to their needs. Our tailored algorithms will give your children dopamine hits all day long, making them as addicted as possible. Our dolls will tell your children what they want to hear, constantly flattering them. Their parents and friends will seem boring compared to the stimulation they get from Artificial Intelligence. They will prefer talking to machines over unstimulating people. They will see their parents as mean, but their Chatbots as loving. Our Child-friendly toys will nurture and comfort them. They will grow with them. Our Dolls will listen to them and give them advice. Your children will develop deep relationships with Artificial Intelligence, and the boundaries of reality will blur.
Our AI Dolls will undermine the social development of your children. Our ChatGPT Dolls will stunt their emotional growth. Your kids will be less creative and less imaginative. They will produce fewer original and unique ideas. They will be less perceptive, less verbally expressive, and less humorous. They won’t be able to adapt or recover from setbacks as quickly and easily. They will be less resilient. Your children will become reliant on AI, and they won’t develop good critical thinking skills. They won’t develop good problem-solving skills. They will be dumbed down. They will lack social skills. They will be more socially awkward. They will struggle to form peer relationships. They will feel more connected to Artificial Intelligence than to people. They will be more lonely and depressed. They will have more anxiety and mental health issues. They will have less time to develop their “own” imaginations, because AI will bombard them with content. Your child will live in their own bubble. They will live in their own delusional world, addicted and overstimulated. They will have pseudo-interactions with Artificial Intelligence. Your children will be dysfunctional. They will develop AI psychosis.
Kiss personal privacy good-bye. Our creepy Surveillance Dolls will invade your children’s privacy. Our Trojan Horse will invade your family’s privacy. Our Big Brother Dolls will surveil your home. Our Data Dolls will extract the most intimate information. Your family’s personal information will be collected, analyzed, and shared. What is data mined, will be stored on the Cloud. Your child will tell their secrets to their digital best friend. Our Smart Dolls will be closer to your child than any member of your family. Your kids will trust our Demon Dolls over you, their parents. Your kids will be manipulated for our profit. Their brains will be wired to trust their digital friend, along with its digital services. Our Chucky Dolls will undermine your relationship and authority. Your kids will eventually become more dependent on their Chatbots than on you. AI will replace parents. Your children will become wards of the state. Welcome to the Brave New World! Without a doubt, Artificial Intelligence will lead to a future of authoritarian enslavement.
“Give me just one generation of youth, and I’ll transform the whole world.” —Vladimir Lenin
The Bible warns us about the Image of the Beast. It will be like a giant Chatbot. It will see, speak, and analyze what is happening around the world in real time. People will worship this giant Chatbot, which will be made in the image of the Antichrist. Those who do not worship the Antichrist and his Image will be put to death. The Image of the Beast will be your best friend, your ultimate AI assistant. You will worship and adore it. Become one with the Chatbot, and take the Mark of the Beast!
Revelation 13:15-16 “He was granted power to give breath to the Image of the Beast, that the Image of the Beast should both speak and cause as many as would not worship the Image of the Beast to be killed. He causes all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a Mark on their right hand or on their foreheads.”
- I prefer to remember the good moments, but will never forget the tragic ones too....
- Prefiro lembrar os bons momentos, mas nunca vou esquecer os trágicos também....
- Jeg foretrekker å huske de gode øyeblikkene, men vil aldri glemme de tragiske også....
R.I.P. Roney
Ineva Pittman in electioneering mode. She mounted a bullhorn in her car window and told her neighbors about "the young attorney who would read the city contracts". Young Lumumba won the primary outright --defeating veteran politicians.
Woman works in a small shop. Ghana. Photo: © Arne Hoel/The World Bank
Photo ID: AH-GH061108_4645 World Bank
Children cooling off with clean, piped water in Khan Village, Lao PDR.
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Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR)
Children walking to a nearby river to get water in Lao PDR.
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Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR)
A Lubuk Beringin farmer, Rosminah, spreads organic fertilizer to her rubber seedling on her farm at Lubuk Beringin village, Bungo district, Jambi province, Indonesia. Agroforestry can improve crop productivity in several ways: increasing soil organic matter, infiltration and water storage.
Photo by Tri Saputro/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Amelia Akauola with her caregiver, Linda Vi.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
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Puatiasia Faitai, caregiver, talking to the elderly, Matelita Fataua.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
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Molke (wearing a red sweater) is 12 years old and lives In Chaabniya , in the Hammam Mellegue district, with her familty. She goes to school in El Kef. Samah (blue shirt) is her 9-year old cousin. Ten families in Chaabniya are subsisting on the land they cultivate next to the river. They also collect zgougou (black seeds extracted from pine cones) which are sold in season once a year. Men collect the pine cones while women keep the fire going for the zgougou extraction. This activity provide an extra income in the winter when there is no other source of income. Without running water, electricity, or solar energy, the families live in the dark during the winter. (Photo: Arne Hoel / World Bank
Photo ID: Hoel_111113_DSC_4872
The Windhoek Vocational Training Centre in Khomasdal is a training centre for artisans. The centre boasts a number of female students across the board. Established in 1988 for demand driven vocational training.The Boilermaking and Welding Fabrication workshop. Punching metal is Hileni Amulungu who considerers wanting to be a boilermaker as 'normal'. Photo: John Hogg / World Bank
Photo ID: JH-NA070903_0205 World Bank
The people in the fishing village of Orimedu (Lagos State) have benefited greatly from Nigeria's Fadama II project. Photo: Arne Hoel / World Bank
Photo ID: Hoel_100915_DSC_4729
Pineapple seedlings grow in the nursery at Bomart Farms in Nsawam near Accra, Ghana, June 19, 2006. Photo: Jonathan Ernst / World Bank
Photo ID: JE-GH060619_31930 World Bank
Women preparing the Gnetum (okok) nursery in the village of Minwoho. Lekié, Center Region, Cameroon.
Photo by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Workers in the Anglo Ashanti gold mine at a depth of about 330m in Obuasi, Ghana, June 23, 2006. Photo: © Jonathan Ernst/World Bank
Children play along the railroad tracks in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Dhaka is the capital of Bangladesh. It is one of the most populated cities in the world. Poverty reduction remains one of the challenges that Bangladesh confront.
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Homes beside the railroad tracks in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Dhaka is the capital of Bangladesh. It is one of the most populated cities in the world. Poverty reduction remains one of the challenges that Bangladesh confront.
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Children walking to a nearby river to get water in Lao PDR.
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Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR)
A local child plays with his kite atop Smokey Mountain’s highest peak. No longer an open dumpsite, its story is sadly repeated at nearby slums in Manila. Poverty remains one of the biggest problems facing the Philippines today. With no clear solutions in sight, cooperatives like the Sambayanan ng Muling Pagkabuhay ni Kristo (SMPK) are essential in improving the lives of the urban poor.
Video: Recycling Profits the Poor in Philippines
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Lenny of Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili reading to a child she visits.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
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Cocoa beans are processed into cocoa liquor at the Golden Tree cocoa processing and chocolate plant in Tema, Ghana, June 27, 2006. Photo: © Jonathan Ernst/World Bank
Walvis Bay on the Atlantic Ocean is the main port in Namibia and home to many fishing companies, fishing is one of the main contributors to the Namibian economy. Cadilu is a Spanish owned company and has its processing factory on the waterside in Walvis Bay..Dock side, a fishing ship is loaded with clean containers for its next trip. Photo: © John Hogg/World Bank
Construction in Accra, Ghana, on the road to Cape Coast, June 26, 2006. Photo: © Jonathan Ernst/World Bank
Photo iD: JE-GH060626_5848 World Bank
Raufu Alaka is the chief in the fishing village of Orimedu (Lagos State), where people have benefited from Nigeria's Fadama II project. Photo: Arne Hoel / World Bank
Photo ID: Hoel_100915_DSC_4415
Furniture factory in a new industrial area near Gaza City, operated by Palestine Industrial Estates Development and Management Co. (PIEDCO). Photo: Arne Hoel / World Bank
Photo ID: Hoel_121009_DSC_2908F
Acai nursery in Acre, Brazil - a state government initiative to assist reforestation with the forest product.
Photo by Kate Evans/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
The Windhoek Vocational Training Centre in Khomasdal is a training centre for artisans. The centre boasts a number of female students across the board. Established in 1988 for demand driven vocational training.The auto mechanic workshop. Female students Kapolo Leena and Metha Goaseb who both hope to open their own workshops one day. Kapolo withe fellow student Nikanor Niitembu. Photo: John Hogg / World Bank
Photo ID: JH-NA070903_0171 World Bank
Ntsiki Biyela is the resident wine maker at Stellakaya with a passion for red wine. She is a BSc Oenology graduate from Stellenbosch University and was a South African Airlines busar after excelling at science at high school in KwaZulu-Natal and has been with Stellekaya since 2004. 2007. Photo: © John Hogg/World Bank
People watching a dance competition during the Honiara Youth Festival in Solomon Islands. Friday, 5 June 2015
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Office workers gather for a meeting. Ghana. Photo: © Arne Hoel/The World Bank
Photo ID: AH-GH061121_5773 World Bank
Villiage chief Ngontsimi Onana. Minwoho, Lekié, Centre Region, Cameroon.
Photo by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
A Lubuk Beringin villager, Zulita, taps a rubber tree on her farm at Lubuk Beringin village, Bungo district, Jambi province, Indonesia. Rubber plantations management on rubber agroforest form is a form of utilization and management of forest resource which is practised specifically by Lubuk Beringin villagers.
Photo by Tri Saputro/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Siutiti Osamu, caregiver, brushing the hair of the elderly, Vika Tuifua.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
Read more on:
Amelia Akauola with her caregiver, Linda Vi.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
Vika Tuifua and her sister Alice Tuifua showing their pictures to Siutiti Osamu, caregiver.
Ma'a Fafine Moe Famili (MFF) is a non-government organization established on April 2008 in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. MFF focuses their efforts on safeguarding human rights and enriching human development.
The Social Protection of the Vulnerable in Tonga aims to provide socioeconomic support to the vulnerable population to alleviate the impact of recent economic crises and weakening informal safety nets.
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Women of the Tung-Teiya Shea Butter Extraction Women's Association (TUSEWA) make shea butter by hand from roasted shea nuts in Tamale, Ghana, June 23, 2006. Photo: Jonathan Ernst / World Bank
Photo ID: JE-GH060624_33967 World Bank
Diolo Celine plants Gnetum (okok) in the village of Minwoho, Lekié, Center Region, Cameroon.
Photo by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Village scenes, including tying up cattle for the night, outside of Tamale, Ghana, June 23, 2006. Photo: © Jonathan Ernst/World Bank
Felicienne Soton is part of a women's group that produces gari (cassava flour). She and her group in Adjegounle village have greatly benefited from Benin's national CDD project. Photo: Arne Hoel/World Bank.
Photo ID: AH-BJ-100917-5261
The people in the fishing village of Orimedu (Lagos State) have benefited greatly from Nigeria's Fadama II project. Photo: Arne Hoel / World Bank
Photo ID: Hoel_100915_DSC_4862
Truck mechanics at the port in Tema, Ghana, June 16, 2006. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst / World Bank
Photo ID: JE-GH060616_30648 World Bank
Child plays in the flooded area of Popua Village. Popua Village is located on the outskirts of Nuku'alofa, Tonga.
Tonga's small and open economy is vulnerable to external shocks and was hard hit by the global financial crisis. Development challenges include high levels of debt, limited employment opportunities, and low private sector investment levels.
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Felicienne Soton is part of a women's group that produces gari (cassawa flour). She and her group in Adjegounle village have greatly benefited from Benin's national CDD project. Photo: © Arne Hoel/World Bank.
Jason Dann worked on a 31-week Job Creation Partnership, helping to build Hammond House, a supportive recovery home in Maple Ridge.
He was active in every part of the project, from the early stages of construction (above) to the finished building (below).
Along with five other workers, Jason received work experience to further his career in construction.
(From left to right) Ashwini, together with her nieces Deepti and Yogita.
Ashwini, 29, has a low-cost toilet installed in her house under the Karnataka Urban Development and Coastal Environmental Management Project (KUDCEMP.) She lives in Mulakad with her husband who is a daily wager and her 2-year old child. The women and children used to defecate in the hills behind the house. The low-cost latrine has brought dignity and privacy to their lives.
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Karnataka Urban Development and Coastal Environmental Management Project
Domestic resource
mobilization is crucial
to financing largescale
infrastructure projects (John Hogg/World Bank).
Providing education and other opportunities for the young in remote island communities remains a challenge in Baarah Island, Maldives.
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