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YoshidaYui

(45,535 posts)
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 09:50 PM Tuesday

This message was self-deleted by its author

This message was self-deleted by its author (YoshidaYui) on Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:42 PM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.

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This message was self-deleted by its author (Original Post) YoshidaYui Tuesday OP
Wow. buzzycrumbhunger Tuesday #1
The video is AI slop from a channel that started uploading AI slop videos 5 months ago and has already posted highplainsdem Tuesday #2
Ugh. buzzycrumbhunger Tuesday #6
link to a real article about this- mopinko Tuesday #3
Thanks, Mo! highplainsdem Tuesday #8
Awesome BaronChocula Wednesday #14
AI much? Nt Trueblue Texan Tuesday #4
Yui, that isn't a science video. It's AI slop from a channel that also has AI slop videos on aliens, 10 thousand highplainsdem Tuesday #5
This message was self-deleted by its author Deuxcents Tuesday #7
AI slop stonecutter357 Tuesday #9
It says "Altered or synthetic content" right at the top of the thumbnail. Please delete it. TheRickles Tuesday #10
The real article is way cool! usonian Tuesday #11
A meta free-for-all. Here's what Google's Gemini (AI) had to say when I asked how AI had altered this: teach1st Tuesday #12
Thank you for the critique. I live near the Gulf and have seen bits n pieces from local news channels Deuxcents Wednesday #15
A comment of appreciation BaronChocula Wednesday #13

buzzycrumbhunger

(2,017 posts)
1. Wow.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:07 PM
Tuesday

I live near there and don’t remember seeing a thing about this… (Note I haven’t subscribed to the Herald-Tribune since they sold out and became little more than an advertiser, and ditched TV over a decade ago, so… )

Really cool, though!

highplainsdem

(62,629 posts)
2. The video is AI slop from a channel that started uploading AI slop videos 5 months ago and has already posted
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:26 PM
Tuesday

73 - roughly one slop video every other day, on all kinds of tabloid-style subjects: Nazis, aliens, ancient Egyptians, the Titanic, Atlantis...

None of it real. None if it science. Link below to show what nonsense they're posting.

https://youtube.com/@TheHiddenEmpire-s9h

buzzycrumbhunger

(2,017 posts)
6. Ugh.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:37 PM
Tuesday

*eyeroll*

highplainsdem

(62,629 posts)
8. Thanks, Mo!
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 11:00 PM
Tuesday

BaronChocula

(4,641 posts)
14. Awesome
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 12:27 AM
Wednesday

Much more productive than outright poo-pooing the post for being AI.

I actually posted the same link below before I saw your comment.

Trueblue Texan

(4,540 posts)
4. AI much? Nt
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:34 PM
Tuesday

highplainsdem

(62,629 posts)
5. Yui, that isn't a science video. It's AI slop from a channel that also has AI slop videos on aliens, 10 thousand
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 10:36 PM
Tuesday

miles of tunnels that ancient humans supposedly built, genetic secrets of the Rothschilds and Ben Franklin, various secrets of the Titanic and sunken Soviet and Nazi submarines, etc.

Garbage. https://youtube.com/@TheHiddenEmpire-s9h

Before you recommend a video, especially one marked as AI (synthetic content) as that one is, you should check to see what else the channel is posting, if it has any credibility at all.

Response to YoshidaYui (Original post)

stonecutter357

(13,052 posts)
9. AI slop
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 11:27 PM
Tuesday

TheRickles

(3,442 posts)
10. It says "Altered or synthetic content" right at the top of the thumbnail. Please delete it.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 11:32 PM
Tuesday

usonian

(25,912 posts)
11. The real article is way cool!
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 11:51 PM
Tuesday

Short of it (do read!)

Baby oysters prefer to grow on other oysters’ shells.


That's it

Free housing for the young!


Too damn smart for our capitalist overlords.

teach1st

(6,026 posts)
12. A meta free-for-all. Here's what Google's Gemini (AI) had to say when I asked how AI had altered this:
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 11:59 PM
Tuesday

When it comes to "restoration" videos, it's very common for AI-generated scripts to exaggerate results or hallucinate "miracle" outcomes. However, looking at the specifics of this video compared to real-world data from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) and the University of Florida (UF), the core facts are remarkably accurate, though there are a few nuanced points to clarify.

1. The "Half a Million Tons" Figure
The video mentions 500,000 tons of shells being dumped between 2007 and 2024.

Fact Check: This is accurate but represents the total effort across various sites in the Gulf, not a single massive dump. The most famous projects (like those in Apalachicola Bay and near Cedar Key) have indeed used massive amounts of fossilized shell and fresh oyster "cultch" to combat the 90% decline in oyster populations.

2. The "Stinking Scraps" Narrative
The video emphasizes that these were rotting restaurant leftovers still covered in "flesh."

The Reality: While the shells do come from restaurants, there is a strict "curing" protocol that the video glosses over. Shells are typically aged on land for 3 to 6 months in the sun. This UV exposure kills off pathogens and dries out any remaining organic matter. Dumping "raw" restaurant waste directly into the ocean would actually be illegal and could introduce invasive species or diseases.

3. The "Impossible" Recovery Speed
The video claims life exploded by 340% and that species missing for 20 years suddenly reappeared.

Fact Check: This is largely true but with a caveat. Oysters are "ecosystem engineers." When you provide the substrate (the shells), the recovery is incredibly fast because the larvae are already in the water—they just have nowhere to land.

The "Missing" Species: It’s less that they were "extinct" and more that they had no reason to visit a barren, sandy seafloor. Once you build a "city" (the reef), predatory fish like Snook and Redfish move back in almost immediately.

4. Hurricane Irma Performance
The video credits the reefs with reducing erosion by 30-40% during Hurricane Irma.

Fact Check: This aligns with real research. Studies on "Living Shorelines" in Florida have shown that natural reefs often outperform concrete seawalls because they are "porous." Instead of a wave hitting a wall and reflecting energy (which causes more erosion), the reef breaks the wave into smaller, harmless ripples.

5. Carbon Storage & The Future
The video mentions the reefs "racing" against ocean acidification.

Fact Check: This is a sophisticated and accurate point. While oysters store carbon in their shells (sequestration), if the water becomes too acidic, those shells can actually begin to dissolve. This is an active area of concern for Florida marine biologists.

Summary: Did AI alter the facts?
The video stays surprisingly close to the scientific reality of the Lone Cabbage Reef and Apalachicola restoration projects. The only "AI flavoring" is likely the dramatic narrative (the "impossible" success and the focus on the smell). In reality, these are carefully engineered scientific projects that were expected to work—it just took a long time to secure the funding to prove it.

Deuxcents

(27,292 posts)
15. Thank you for the critique. I live near the Gulf and have seen bits n pieces from local news channels
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 12:59 AM
Wednesday

About the efforts to bring back marine life using oyster shells and its successes. This regeneration didn’t happen overnight and patience is hard to come by with conflicting ideas but we’re hearing of successes with more artificial reefs and more loads of oyster shells. Looks promising

BaronChocula

(4,641 posts)
13. A comment of appreciation
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 12:24 AM
Wednesday

Instead of blasting this post for being "AI slop" and then moving on...

I actually learned a little something new and went to a legit site and found some verification. Thanks for posting!

https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/gulf-coast-oyster-shell-recycling-key-sustainable-seafood-and-coastal-protection

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