The epidemic of AI-generated fake crimes

Published on January 06, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
AI-generated image showing a fake crime scene with police tape and suspicious stains, illustrating the deceptive realism of this content.

Fake True Crime: When AI Becomes the Best Crime Fiction Writer 🕵️‍♂️

In the depths of the internet, where credibility is conspicuously absent, a new genre has been born: "fake true crime." These tales of invented crimes, created by artificial intelligence, have more plot twists than a soap opera at 3am and are sold as real with the same shamelessness as a politician on the campaign trail.

"It's like playing 'broken telephone' but with algorithms that don't know when to stop" - confessed a viewer after falling for the fifth fake video of the day.

The Recipe for Creating a Fake Crime

The creators of this content follow a foolproof formula:

AI-generated image showing a fake crime scene with police tape and suspicious stains, illustrating the deceptive realism of this content.

Why These Videos Are More Addictive Than Coffee

The algorithm rewards this content because:

The result: a perfectly oiled click-generating machine. 💰

The Ethical Dilemma (That Nobody Cares About)

While some debate the dangers of this misinformation, creators keep racking up views with:

Conclusion: When Fiction Surpasses Reality

In this world where fake crimes get more attention than real ones, the real victim is our common sense. But hey, at least the AIs are proving to be better writers than many Hollywood screenwriters. Who needs human creativity when you have an algorithm that can generate 50 alternative endings in seconds?

Maybe the next step is to sue the AIs for defamation... if anyone can find who's responsible. 😅