NVIDIA has been found to be hosting a blog about a 'Brazilian facesitting fart game'

An abandoned NVIDIA website has been found to have over 62,000 posts of vulgar content that appears to have been generated by AI, including pornographic posts such as 'Top 5 Anal Vore Games' and 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Game.'
Why Was Nvidia Hosting Blogs About 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Games'?
According to news outlet 404 Media, a site that Nvidia apparently created for the event, events.nsv.nvidia.com, was flooded with spam content and contained low-quality articles with search-inducing titles such as 'restaurant recommendations' and 'gaming roundups.'
Of the more than 62,000 pieces of content that appeared to be AI-generated, dozens were pornographic, including 'Top 5 Anal Vore Games,' 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Game,' and 'Simpsons Porn Game.'
Below is the archived page for 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Game'.
Brazilian Facesitting Fart Games - Event Nexus
https://archive.is/IK5jS

The page for 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Game' states, 'Facesitting is a sexual act in which one person sits on the face of another, often as an erotic play or act of dominance. Fart games, on the other hand, are a more light-hearted and humorous activity. Brazil, with its carnivals and rich cultural heritage, is unique in its blend of openness and playfulness. It is important to approach themes such as facesitting and fart games with cultural sensitivity.' It seems to be an attempt to force a cultural analysis of a non-existent theme such as 'facesitting fart game.'
When 404 Media contacted NVIDIA, they said the site was taken down within two hours.
Additionally, a search for 'Brazilian Facesitting Fart Games' reveals that a site with no affiliation to Adobe, but which contains 'adobe.com' in the URL, appears to be hosting content of the same name.

According to 404 Media, similar spam content has infiltrated not only NVIDIA, but also the government's official website vaccines.gov , the American Council on Education website, Stanford University, and news media NPR. This may have been caused by a 'drop catch' where a third party acquires an expired domain, or by a subdomain being hijacked by abusing DNS settings.
The purpose of the spam content is unclear. Search engine links to related content, such as the Adobe site above, redirect to stocks.wowlazy.com, which itself is an unclear SEO spam page. Many of the posts are mundane, such as a false claim that a closed cat cafe is reopening, or a post promoting an eyelash extension salon in Kansas City, Missouri.
'AI continues to eat the internet,' 404 Media wrote. 'These spam tactics prey on older sites owned by big domains in order to get clicks. Google's 'AI generated summaries', or top results in mainstream search engines, are exposing this filth.'
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