As others have said, it does make sense now about AI generating this mug advertisement.
Yeah, at least make it a beaker, or have mL lines on it.
You could test the AI concept by doing a search on Jungle with keywords "Got Nitrite", "glass beaker", and "milliliter" or "ml line" or something like that and see what comes up. Maybe a useful
exit beaker ad will be generated.
The AI concept makes sense with these "death kits" that are mentioned in the lawsuit against the Jungle site. It makes sense, now at least, that AI may be combining items together in the form of a "kit" for people doing searches for SN. If that is the case, I think the lawsuit will fail, or at least should fail. The Jungle site should be able to show easily that this is how their algorithm works, and that it does this for anything searched for on their site. Actually, I think the entire case should be thrown out before it even starts, but that's just my opinion. For the one plaintiff who had an underage child (girl I believe) who ctb with SN purchased from the site with a debit or credit card, and they claim Jungle should have stopped it, it seems to me that the parents are the ones who dropped the ball here. Where exactly were they when all this was going on? Is it Jungle's responsibility to police someone's child? As far as I know, SN is not illegal and isn't even a controlled substance, and has no age restrictions that I know. So, Jungle is being sued for selling a legal substance, to someone under age who
may not be legally allowed to make purchases with a debit or credit card, and who did so because the parents weren't supervising their child appropriately. In the end I'm sure Jungle will settle the lawsuit just to make it go away, and everyone who shops on Jungle will pay for that in the form of higher prices on everything.