Artificial intelligence is being used to generate a whole new kind of online scam
For the past two years, I've been following a woman around the internet. It sounds ominous, I know, but hear me out. Her name is Albertina Geller, and I first stumbled across her online in October 2020, on LinkedIn. She'd listed herself as a "self-employed freelancer" in Chicago. I'm also a self-employed freelancer, so we had that in common. In her bio, she said that "I learn & teach people how to be healthy, balance their gut and improve their immune system for healthy living." I've had some gut and immune-system issues myself. It was a connection practically written in the stars. But I have to admit that what first interested me about her -- what led me to spend two years tracking her, at a distance -- wasn't our shared interests. Her LinkedIn photo was a straight-on headshot of a white woman, mid- to late 20s, with a pale complexion and lightly rosy cheeks. She had shoulder-length blond hair, swept neatly to one side.
Oct-16-2022, 22:12:25 GMT
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