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It is false that a woman driver crashed her 0km Nissan car upon leaving the dealership

Hoax – A woman driver was allegedly involved in an accident with her brand-new Nissan right after leaving the dealership.

Analysis

What promised to be a day of great excitement, photos, and the characteristic smell of a new car, turned into a fright and a crash, according to messages intensely circulating on social media and messaging apps. The story in question points to an ironic and unfortunate incident, involving a female driver and her newly acquired Nissan vehicle, at a moment that should have been one of celebration.

The versions spreading in various languages, such as Portuguese, Spanish, and Indonesian, detail that, immediately after leaving the dealership’s lot, the woman supposedly accelerated abruptly and uncontrollably, colliding with a sign or an advertising post.

The impact, according to the account, would have been sufficient to bring the metal structure down directly onto the car, transforming the event into an episode that quickly went viral, generating comments that range from mockery to concern over the material damage. The content being checked is as follows:

Version 1: Woman buys new car and crashes it, knocking a sign down onto the dealership. Woman buys a 0km car and crashes it upon leaving the dealership in a major city! Knocks down the store’s sign and causes a disturbance. What to do in case of an accident with a new car? Understand the next steps and avoid problems! A driver experienced a real scare just minutes after picking up her brand-new car from the dealership.

As soon as she left the premises, she ended up being involved in a minor accident: the vehicle collided with a signage post, which detached and fell directly onto the newly purchased automobile. Despite the impact and the unexpected damage, the woman did not suffer any injuries. Teams from the store itself and passersby who witnessed the scene assisted in the moments following the accident. The incident drew attention due to the irony of the situation and quickly circulated on social media, where internet users commented on the driver’s bad luck right on her first trip with the new car. Fortunately, everything resulted only in material damage, and the driver is fine.

Version 2:Car’s debut… and she crashed it before leaving the agency. A woman started her new van inside the agency and, seconds later, had already crashed it against a pillar. The video went viral and generated mockery, criticism… and many questions about whether “debuting” is enough to know how to handle it.

Version 3: It’s tough for a while and I like it: your Nissan gives you a scare when you leave the dealership. What promised to be a day of excitement, photos, and the smell of a new car, ended in a fright and a crash for a driver who had just started her Nissan when, upon leaving the dealership, she accelerated too much and ended up hitting an advertising sign. The impact caused the sign to fall directly onto the newly acquired car, turning the scene into something meme-worthy. Fortunately, there were no injuries, despite the scare, the embarrassment, and the advertisement on the same pole being a success.

Fact-Check

Given the wide circulation of the video and the curiosity generated by the alleged accident, it is essential to investigate the truthfulness of the images. To do this, we sought to answer three central questions: 1) Did the woman crash the new Nissan car upon leaving the dealership? 2) How was the video showing the accident made? 3) Are there similar fake news stories to this one?

Did a woman crash a new Nissan car upon leaving the dealership?

Despite the wealth of detail and the drama of the video, the story reporting the accident of a woman with her brand-new Nissan immediately after leaving the dealership is unfounded. The narrative, which circulated in various regions like the Americas, Europe, Indonesia, and others, lacks crucial information that would prove its authenticity.

There are no consistent mentions of the driver’s name, the exact dealership, a precise location of the incident, or any official record that would confirm the event as real. This absence of basic data, common in hoaxes, already raises serious doubts about the veracity of the material.

How was the video showing a woman crashing a new Nissan car upon leaving the dealership made?

The explanation for the high degree of realism in the video lies in the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI). More attentive observers and analysis tools were able to identify several clues that point to digital manipulation. Subtle flaws, such as inconsistencies in the Nissan logo at the dealership, the unrealistic way the advertising post falls, and the vehicle’s behavior—which seems not to respond as expected to the steering maneuver before the collision—strongly suggest that the video was generated by algorithms.

An analysis carried out by tools like Hive Moderation, for example, corroborates this conclusion, indicating a probability greater than 90% (more precisely, 90.5%) that the content is a product of AI, and not a record of a real event.

Are there similar fake news stories to this one?

Yes, the use of Artificial Intelligence to create extremely convincing videos and spread disinformation has become a recurring trend and one that is increasingly difficult to fact-check. This case of the Nissan car accident is just another example of the challenge that synthetic content poses to journalism and fact verification.

It is a phenomenon that spans various themes, such as the alleged existence of humanoid companion robots, to seemingly real videos about children in dramatic situations or, even, about failed military tests. The growing sophistication of these productions demands heightened caution when consuming videos that go viral without official sources or confirmation.

Conclusion

The video showing a driver colliding her new Nissan into a dealership sign right after collection is, in fact, an advanced example of content generated by Artificial Intelligence. Despite appearing extremely realistic and having circulated widely, the story is unfounded due to a lack of corroborating details and the presence of visual inconsistencies detectable by analysis tools. The incident, therefore, is not a real record of an accident, but rather a piece of digitally created disinformation, reinforcing the need for vigilance regarding synthetic videos that seek to go viral on social media.

Fake News ❌

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