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A video of a woman presenting a non-existent " Torenza " national passport at JFK Airport (USA) is taking the internet by storm, sparking debate about the authenticity and true origin of the clip.
Social networks are abuzz with a video of a woman being stopped at JFK Airport (USA) while showing her passport with the name of the country "Torenza" â which does not exist on any map at all. The clip went viral on TikTok and Instagram, attracting millions of views. In the video, the woman confidently asserts that she is from Tokyo and that "Torenza" is located in the Caucasus region, leaving customs officials extremely confused and the online community confused about the authenticity of the incident.
Many netizens commented that they were "completely shocked" when they witnessed this scene. Some accounts even shared it with the caption: "A country called Torenza â but no one has ever heard of it. The passport looks unbelievably real!"
Since then, countless theories have been raised. Some people think that this is a sophisticated deepfake incident, while others speculate about a parallel universe phenomenon, where another reality exists in parallel with our world. Even a part of viewers believe that the video is a "sign" that artificial intelligence (AI) is making the line between real and fake increasingly blurred.
On the X platform (the old Twitter), many posts went viral with thousands of shares and hashtags #PassportFromNowhere and #Torenza, attracting the attention of the technology world and the international fact-check community.
After taking the world by storm, the information verification platform Grok, backed by Elon Musk , entered the investigation. The results showed that the entire video was an AI-generated product, without any actual evidence of the woman or the country "Torenza".
"There is no official data from JFK Airport or any agency confirming the incident," Grok said. This is likely to be a fake AI-generated content, inspired by the legendary story 'The Man from Taured.'"
This discovery has the online community once again concerned about the danger of spreading misinformation in the AI era, where the generated videos can be so realistic that even the most observant viewers are fooled.
The "Torenza" event immediately reminded many people of the story of "The Man from Taured", one of the most famous mysteries ever recorded at Haneda Airport (Tokyo) in 1954.
According to the story, an elegant Western man arrived in Japan on the passport of the "Taured" country â a place he claims is located between France and Spain, which is the current location of Andorra. His passport is full of legal entry stamps from many other countries, including Japan.
When customs officers checked, they couldn't find any information about the country. The man was detained overnight at a hotel for questioning, but by the next morning, he had disappeared without a trace, the room still locked from the inside.
Since then, "The Man from Taured" has become a legendary story, seen by many as evidence of parallel worlds or the phenomenon of space-time shift. The "Torenza passport" case is only a product of AI, but it reflects a reality worth pondering: artificial intelligence is now powerful enough to create virtual stories that even real people believe to be real.
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