MAN GIVES URGENT WARNING... (WHAT'S GOING ON?!) - YouTube
Transcripts:
I'm confused. I I think there is something strange going on. Like what a what an odd time for us to be alive, you know, in all of human history. What an odd time for us to be having this conversation right now. So I think there's something strange going on, but I don't I don't know what. And even in the simulation like the simulation theory there, people talk about that at many different levels.
One thing is sure, our consciousness and what we define as reality is only a small part of what is really going on. would say that our consciousness is the only thing we can be sure that's really going on and it's certainly the most important thing going on to any of us. But yeah, there's it's an unusual time to be alive.
And guys, just to put into perspective how advanced this technology already is, the network says the host was created without a single frame of realworld filming, making a completely digital human that capable of delivering a nuanced on camera performance. We're in the early innings of what's going to be some big chang scary.
That's why when we flub all the time, you know that we are real. Yes. Upside. So, so the first thing I just want to clarify here, Dr. Rimple is what you're suggesting is that children who have been born to parents to one or both parents who claim to have been ab abducted abducted genetically have the the the genetic inheritance one would expect of a child of two parents but inserted into that into their genetic uh structure are sequences of DNA which have no origin in either of the two parents.
Yeah, that's the idea. That's the idea. I didn't prove it. Again, I didn't prove it, but I developed a method which can easily prove it. So, I need more data and now anybody can do it. So, essentially the idea was that that if there was a genetic manipulation, it seemed like a normal news report until the end because I'm not real.
Last night, UK audiences watching a show about AI taking jobs, stunned to learn that was happening in front of their eyes. In a British TV first, I'm actually an AI presenter. I wasn't on location reporting this story. My image and voice were generated using AI. Before that point, the documentary had shown the host reporting in multiple settings, explaining it was part of a deliberate on-screen stunt to show just how convincing artificial intelligence has become.
The dramatic reveal just the latest demonstration of AI's growing influence. Three seasons and a podcast. Last month, Hollywood responding to the debut of a 100% AI generated actress, Tilly Norwood. you are suddenly up against something that's been generated with 5,000 other actors. But fears of AI's growth going beyond the screen with many American workers worried about the very question posed in that documentary.
So we want to find out, will AI take your job? One major AI company, Anthropic, has said the technology could eliminate up to 50% of entry-level jobs as it improves. At some point, we're going to get to AI systems that are better than almost all humans at almost all tasks. But many saying the technology also creates jobs.
And a recent study showing that benchmark app chat GPT has not upended the labor market. But during the massive growth of AI, a reminder of just how realistic it's becoming. The idea is that we are we were manipulated by the aliens all through history from from ancient times and uh but there is also recent recent abductions and recent manipulations.
So we are hybrids ancient hybrids but but also we continuously being upgraded improved changed. So in recent manipulations the story of lots of abductees documented wonderfully. I wouldn't I don't need to prove there is a lot of books a lot of evidence now with artificial intelligence you just ask artificial intelligence you you will be pointed to proper books proper YouTube channels and proper interviews and um testimonies by people who were abducted and now a space professor who helped design a groundbreaking satellite has
said it will profoundly change our understanding of the universe the Uklid satellite is now 2 years into a six-year mission gathering images that will help better understand dark energy and dark matter. Our reporter Joe Palmer has more. Professor Adam Amara is part of the team who made it possible. Oh wow. What are we looking at here? So this is our university telescope.
It's a 16-in reflecting telescope and it's where we bring our students, we bring the public, and they get to get a hands-on experience of what it's like to do astronomy. We can't do it tonight. Tonight is too cloudy. Well, that's a bit disappointing. So, we can't see anything tonight. Yeah, sorry Joe to bring you all this way, but yeah, that's a problem we often have in this country.
In fact, groundbased telescopes are always limited by weather and other factors, including light pollution. Those amazing photos were actually taken by another of Adam's telescopes, one which isn't affected by clouds. It's called Uklid. It took 20 years to plan and build and two years ago it was launched into space.
It was taken to a particular place called a Lrangee point where the gravitational forces of the Earth and the Sun are balanced. It's a parking spot almost a million miles away, giving Uklid an uninterrupted view of the universe. It'll see everything. It'll see stars. It'll see galaxies. It'll see deep into the universe.
And it does it to this exquisite resolution. So if you look at one of the Uklid images, it starts off big and then you zoom and you see a lot and you zoom and you see a lot and you zoom and you and you just keep on zooming and this detail just keeps popping out of these images. And that's the thing that we haven't done before in space.
My personal passion is what will Ukra tell us about dark matter and dark energy? 95% of all the stuff that exists in the universe is referred to as dark because we can't see it. But we know it's there because it affects the things we can see. And Uklid might help to solve the mystery. We've got 2,000 people across the world working every day, night and day, to process these images.
There's a team down in Portsmouth that are world class at finding these objects called strong lenses. And so they go through and they find these very rare objects where gravity itself bends. We can see the effects of dark matter in glorious detail. We might be close to a paradigm shift in our understanding of the universe which would be quite profound.
So yeah, one of the in the university space lab, Adam's students are the next generation of cosmologists and astrophysicists for understanding the dark matter. We are trying to look to very very small galaxies in the universe. They are called dwarf galaxies for their name and I tried to see what chemicals these do galaxy has.
Many people would be curious about how the universe actually came into existence and to find answers to that would be very interesting. We have so much technology here that we can use to disposal and computers and stuff and computing power to do simulations that you wouldn't get have access to any anywhere else. My greatest ambition is to make sure that UK scientists, especially the young ones, have more opportunities going forward.
Uklid is one of these multigenerational projects to answer really big questions and I just can't wait to see what the answer comes out as. I can never get enough of those beautiful images, those beautiful pictures that we saw at the end there.