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.
Women are turning to artificial intelligence systems such as ChatGPT to determine whether men are lying about their heights on dating apps. Nbaturo – stock.adobe.com
“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.”
Moore shared screenshots of ChatGPT’s near-accurate estimations of her friends’ and family members’ measurements. @venturetwins/X
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.”
Despite the recent buzz around “short king spring,” which saw women dating smaller men, researchers have found that most ladies prefer tall gents. Davide Angelini – stock.adobe.com
Online, Moore applauded Gen Z women for famously finding innovative ways to use ChatGPT to their advantage. REUTERS
“Women considered taller men … more attractive, masculine, dominant and higher in fighting ability,” per data from Texas A&M International University specialists. ArtFamily – stock.adobe.com
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.