Single gals using ChatGPT to expose men lying about height on dating apps
You little liars!
Size matters to super-selective singletons swiping left or right in the search for love.
So, rather than coming up short, some mini-men have begun misleading ladies online, falsifying their underwhelming heights to appear taller.
But now, thanks to artificial intelligence, once-gullible gals are wising up.
“The girls are using ChatGPT to see if men are lying about their height on dating apps,” announced Justine Moore, a venture capitalist from San Francisco, California, to a staggering 361,000 X users.
“Upload 4 pictures” to Chat GPT, continued her explosive tweet about AI’s measuring magic. “It uses proportions and surroundings to estimate height.”
“I tested it on 10 friends & family members,” wrote Moore, adding photographic proof of the bot’s appraisal of her loved ones. “All estimates were within 1 inch of their real height.”
It seems the sun has officially set on “short king spring.”
While long-legged A-listers like Zendaya, 27, standing at a striking 5-foot-10, find it perfectly fine to date diminutive dudes like Tom Holland, 28, who’s only 5-foot-7, most bachelorettes on the prowl are hoping to bag a high-rise hunk.
In fact, Texas A&M International University researchers recently surveyed over 200 heterosexual honeys in their twenties to determine that, “Women considered taller men … more attractive, masculine, dominant and higher in fighting ability.”
With those findings and advanced technology’s whistle-blowing capabilities, little guys don’t seem to have a fighting chance.
But ChatGPT doesn’t just pick on the puny.
It does a little bit of everything — such as help with dinner, crack a few jokes and even act as a computerized Cupid for young lovebirds.
And Moore believes the geniuses of her generation stand to uncover even more of its good uses.
“Gen Z women are the best demographic for finding weird and interesting things to do with ChatGPT,” she tweeted.