Mexico has so many dogs abandoned in its streets that are part of the landscape that has made them a “representative breed”

A few years ago, a story went viral in Mexico City. She had a stray dog ​​nicknamed “Hachiko of La Raza” as the protagonist, and became famous because he spent day and night at a subway exit waiting for an owner who, according to neighbors and users, had died shortly before. Thousands of people began to leave him food and water when they saw him always in the same place. Hachiko was actually a symptom now turned into a race. A national symbol. Mexico has reached such a peculiar point with its stray dogs that one of them has ended up being officially recognized as a representative “race” of the country. The call Candy dogwith its yellowish fur, sharp snout and medium size, has been part of the Mexican urban landscape for so long that millions of people instantly identify it as something everyday and almost cultural. We are talking about an animal that sleeps in front of stores, follows invisible routes through the colonies and survives thanks to small scattered gestures from neighbors who leave it food or water. The phenomenon reveals something deeply latin american: abandoned animals that have ceased to be perceived as exceptions and have become partly natural of urban life. The problem is that this normalization is also a sign of the enormous structural failure surrounding animal abandonment. A “race” born of abandonment. Behind the myth of Caramel there is no real race, but entire generations of miscegenation produced by decades of neglect. A genetic study conducted in Brazil discovered that these dogs contain traces of hundreds of different lineagesfrom German Shepherds to Pekingese. However, the environment has been molding the same extremely recognizable physical pattern: resistant size, short hair, agile body and that yellowish color that helps it better withstand the heat. and certain diseases. The street has acted as a kind of urban natural selection where the animals most adapted to living among asphalt, traffic and extreme temperatures survive best. The result is paradoxical: Mexico has ended up developing its own “type of dog” not through planned breeding, but through mass abandonment. Everyone knows them, but no one adopts. Caramelo generates collective tenderness, memes, movies and millions of interactions on social networks, but that does not mean that it will easily find a home. Rescuers and associations they explain that these dogs tend to become the most invisible in shelters precisely because they are too common. While breeds like the Golden Retriever or the German Shepherd receive hundreds of adoption applications, yellow mixed breed dogs can spend years waiting without anyone asking about them. The contradiction is brutal: they are probably the most recognizable dogs in the country and at the same time the most ignored when the time comes to assume real responsibilities. The collective affection towards them often functions as a kind of abstract affection that rarely translates into adoptions, sterilizations or permanent care. Mexico and a gigantic crisis of animal abandonment. The background to the phenomenon is much harsher than the cute images of dogs resting in the sun suggest. Mexico has one of the largest populations of stray animals in Latin America. Official figures estimate that about 70% of the country’s dogs live homeless and that millions of them were once abandoned pets. And every day more than a thousand animals they are left to their fate. This pressure has generated extreme and deeply controversial situations, such as the case of Tecámac, where authorities recognized the sacrifice of thousands of dogs street during the last years. The discussion reveals the enormous institutional vacuum around the problem: neither shelters, nor public campaigns, nor administrations seem capable of managing an animal population that is already a structural part of the Mexican urban landscape. From everyone and at the same time from no one. If you also want, the figure of Caramel summarizes an uncomfortable idea: many of these dogs survive thanks to an informal network of small community care, but without no one really assumes full responsibility on them. A neighbor gives them food, another takes them to the vet sometimes and someone else lets them sleep in front of his business. However, this chain of solidarity is extremely fragile. Without an official owner, many animals are left out of vaccinations, sterilizations or stable medical care. They live in a kind of limbo where they receive occasional affection, but are still completely exposed to abuses, illnesses or violence. That Mexico has ended up turning these dogs into a recognizable symbol says a lot about the emotional bond that exists with them, but also about the extent to which abandonment has been integrated into everyday normality. Image | Doggo19292 In Xataka | More than a thousand years ago the Mayans exploited a business almost as profitable as gems: the sale of pedigree dogs In Xataka | The easiest way to receive a fine for the Animal Welfare Law: leaving your pet on the terrace

The videos of AI have broken the Instagram and Tiktok algorithms. Welcome to the new “AI landscape”

A little over a month ago This unpleasant video De Instagram went viral in that social network. In him a strange creature half -spider of a man made a strange appearance in a mall. At this time the video has 3.5 million “like” and more than 23,000, but the truly worrying is not that. Collapse of the videos generated by AI. What is worrisome is that this video is part of an avalanche of videos generated by AI that is collapsing networks such as Instagram or Tiktok. And broken algorithms. As they explain in 404 averagethe algorithm of these platforms has ended up breaking through a unique brute force attack. One in which these networks do not stop receiving content generated by AI to end up saturating those recommendation algorithms. A LEA. Brute force attacks try, for example, to find out a password testing one by one all possible combinations. In this case, what they try is to saturate the algorithms so that they end up showing these videos generated by AI, and they are achieving it. Some already call Instagram Ya Tiktok “Villagers of AI” for the enormous amount of these contents, and that have made the conventional contents generated by human users have lost great relevance to the algorithm. Reality has changed. For many these networks they serve not only to entertain themselves, but to be aware of the present. Videos often try to profile reality, but that reality has now been disrupted and those Instagram or Tiktok accounts barely show anything that is real. Some videos are deep -to -detecting unappokes, and as we verify in the past, the paradoxical is that sometimes we are not even able to detect what is real and what is not. AI seeks virality and ends up finding it. The creators in social networks seek to get their videos viral, and for this they dedicate huge resources and time. In spite of this, success is not assured, but spammers that make video content generated with AI do not need to think so much: they can generate thousands of videos with very little effort, flood social networks and wait for some of those contents to be successful. The lottery of the virality is not so much if you have a lot of tickets. The influencers who are earning money with the landfills of AI. As usual in this type of phenomena, influencers have appeared with new formulas to get rich quickly and with hardly any effort. One of them, a 17 -year -old named Daniel Bittonpresumes having already won two million dollars and has a clear message. “While others invest 5 or 6 hours making a perfect video, we can generate 8 or 10 shorts in less than 30 minutes.” As? Using AI tools. The “Hot Dog” method. One of Bitton’s friends is a known spammer of Tiktok called Musa Mustafa. His method to go viral is that of the “sad hot dog”: “When you are hungry at two in the morning, even a sad hot dog knows better than any Michelin restaurant meal. Tiktok works in a similar way. Your audience does not expect (you don’t even want) perfectly polished videos.” Mustafa wonders, not without some reason, “when it was the last time you saw a viral video of Tiktok and thought: ‘Uauh, the degree of color in this video is incredible.” Or what is the same: the amount wins by a win to quality. But platforms embrace these contents. In The Guardian They already warned us Recently: social networks and networks are not stopping this type of spam, but are benefiting from it, they accept it and are even promoting it. In fact they offer tools to facilitate the generation of content through AI, which means that rather than trying to solve the problem, they are aggravating it. An example: Facebook. Meta’s firm recently launched a tool for advertisers called Advantage+. With it it is possible to create with different versions of an advertisement to try them all with the method of A/b test and then select the one that works best. For advertisers (and for the finish line, of course), all this is fantastic, because they can get more effective ads with much less investment of time and money. Are there limits? There will undoubtedly users who They reject This type of content: precisely networks such as Bluesky either Mastodon They move away from the algorithm and are more similar to how they were Twitter or Facebook years ago. But it seems clear that a vast majority of them have no problem with these contents generated by AI, which in fact have an example of success in that porn generated by the impossible combinations –A fish generated by the kissing to a woman generated by AI, an orco generated by AI marrying a girlfriend also generated by AI – they are also becoming viral. More wood for dead Internet theory. It has been talking about how the growing presence of bots on the Internet It will end that the human presence in these contents will be marginal. What we already saw with texts or images generated by the flooding Internet now we are seeing it with videos of the flooding social networks or with Virtual avatars generated by AI. The AI ​​landfill extends, and the worst thing is that not even users – which we contribute to making these contents viral – or the companies – which as we said not only do not stop them, but also promote them – seem to have a greater problem with this situation. Image | Kenneth Schipper In Xataka | Meta follows the steps of X: we not only work writing for her, now we will also work moderating her

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