Look at the photo of the dumbo octopus: The Deepest Ocean Creatures Ever Found Off the US Coast
Honestly I think if these writers are openly using generative AI to illustrate their articles, their prime priority is not so much of accuracy but how fast they can get an article out. And unfortunately this 'quickness' I think is how they have been able to dominate the internet.Look at the photo of the 'sea otter' here: Meet The 10 Most Popular Animals Of Alaska - Animals Around The Globe
My question is why do they have an image labelled as a Ceylon leopard on a page dedicated to endangered South American animals?The 'photo' of 6 The Daggernose Shark is the worst of the lot: 10 Most Endangered Animals in South America - Animals Around The Globe
I don't know what is the worst thing about this article - the agregiously wrong pictures for these species [a lion for a rusty-spotted cat? really?] the title specifying 'big cats' when the four animals listed are small cats [and indeed not the only small cats in the article], or the puma appearing twice as 'cougar' and 'puma' >.<Look at the photos of the 'sand cat', 'marbled cat', flat-headed cat' and 'rusty-spotted cat': The Role of Big Cats in Spirituality and Ancient Rituals
Instead of just posting strings of links and saying "look at this", why don't you say what the mistake is so that people know whether they want to bother opening the link?Look at the photo of the white cockatoo: 15 Animals and Wildlife that Start with C - Animals Around The Globe
Cacoon.(For those who aren't bothered it's a phone photo of a raccoon carrying bread or something in it's mouth), mistakes like these are a dime a dozen considering how fast junk news/articles like this get pumped out onto the internet especially with the rapid use of AI.