Wrong color

I am coming around now to the AI theory, especially if the hood on that tractor flips forward for service. It would have been ripped open and raised up if the force was great enough to lift the tractor.
In reply 9 I made a comment about how realistic the dust from the hooves is. Now after watching closer at about the first hit a rear hoof digs in and they places a dark mark there as if the hoof dug down to a damp level. Then in the following hit the bulls rear hooves stomp and skid a bit very close to the same spot the dark mark is still showing. However, the later movements of the hooves never reveal dampness.
Yeah, I'm a little suspicious about the black marks left by the rear hooves.
 
One runner in the blue shirt in the beginning. after the bull attack there are two in blue shirts seen.

When it started the tractor was moving under power, then stopped like the operator pushed the clutch. The operator's hands didn't go to a shift lever, and it doesn't look like he shut anything off when he bailed from it, but it didn't resume traveling under power, if he had disengaged the clutch to stop.
 
So....how do you prove to me that this was really AI generated?
And......AI says it is real.....who to believe?

AI Overview



Based on recent viral video trends and fact-checking reports, videos showing a bull attacking a vehicle in India are often
real, authentic footage of animal behavior, rather than photoshopped or AI-generated, although they can appear surreal.
Here is the context regarding recent viral incidents:
  • Recent Viral Incident (March 2026): A viral video shows a large bull in India attacking a moving tractor, damaging its parts with its horns. These types of incidents are frequently reported in Indian media as real, often occurring when bulls become aggressive or threatened, such as in the Jalandhar Dairy Complex or in Uttar Pradesh.
  • Other Related Incidents: In another real, widely shared CCTV video, a bull in Rishikesh was seen attacking and dragging a parked scooter. Another report details a rampage in Aligarh where a bull attacked pedestrians.
  • Misleading Content: While many bull attacks are real, some content showing animals with cars has been identified as AI-generated in the past. However, the specific incident of a bull attacking a farm vehicle (tractor) in a rural setting is consistent with actual livestock behavior in India.
Conclusion: The video of a bull attacking a tractor is generally considered real footage, often capturing genuine animal-human conflict in rural areas.
 
And......AI says it is real.....who to believe?

AI Overview



Based on recent viral video trends and fact-checking reports, videos showing a bull attacking a vehicle in India are often
real, authentic footage of animal behavior, rather than photoshopped or AI-generated, although they can appear surreal.
Here is the context regarding recent viral incidents:
  • Recent Viral Incident (March 2026): A viral video shows a large bull in India attacking a moving tractor, damaging its parts with its horns. These types of incidents are frequently reported in Indian media as real, often occurring when bulls become aggressive or threatened, such as in the Jalandhar Dairy Complex or in Uttar Pradesh.
  • Other Related Incidents: In another real, widely shared CCTV video, a bull in Rishikesh was seen attacking and dragging a parked scooter. Another report details a rampage in Aligarh where a bull attacked pedestrians.
  • Misleading Content: While many bull attacks are real, some content showing animals with cars has been identified as AI-generated in the past. However, the specific incident of a bull attacking a farm vehicle (tractor) in a rural setting is consistent with actual livestock behavior in India.
Conclusion: The video of a bull attacking a tractor is generally considered real footage, often capturing genuine animal-human conflict in rural areas.
No more swaying needed here, show me where to sign up. Just don’t say I’m a “sheeple” :oops:
 
If that bull was ------ enough to attack a tractor you would certainly think it would be breathing hard. When it stops at the end it isn't even breathing. Plus It would want to be with the group of cattle that's walking away in the background.
 
And......AI says it is real.....who to believe?

AI Overview



Based on recent viral video trends and fact-checking reports, videos showing a bull attacking a vehicle in India are often
real, authentic footage of animal behavior, rather than photoshopped or AI-generated, although they can appear surreal.
Here is the context regarding recent viral incidents:
  • Recent Viral Incident (March 2026): A viral video shows a large bull in India attacking a moving tractor, damaging its parts with its horns. These types of incidents are frequently reported in Indian media as real, often occurring when bulls become aggressive or threatened, such as in the Jalandhar Dairy Complex or in Uttar Pradesh.
  • Other Related Incidents: In another real, widely shared CCTV video, a bull in Rishikesh was seen attacking and dragging a parked scooter. Another report details a rampage in Aligarh where a bull attacked pedestrians.
  • Misleading Content: While many bull attacks are real, some content showing animals with cars has been identified as AI-generated in the past. However, the specific incident of a bull attacking a farm vehicle (tractor) in a rural setting is consistent with actual livestock behavior in India.
Conclusion: The video of a bull attacking a tractor is generally considered real footage, often capturing genuine animal-human conflict in rural areas.
From your AI report:

Conclusion:
The video of a bull attacking a tractor is generally considered real footage, often capturing genuine animal-human conflict in rural areas.

Nothing there says this video is real. The Recent Viral Incident finding only says such incidents are frequently reported in Indian media as real.

The Misleading Content says some content has been identified as AI generated in the past. The fact that the video may be consistent with livestock behavior, does not say that this video is real, not AI generated.

If you view it on a desktop monitor full screen you see one runner in a blue shirt early in the video. About the 11 to 13 second range if you look closely over the bull's back there are two runners about side by side.
 
I see a lot of AI junk, but this has too many little details that are correct.
Tell us what you think is correct? Look at what Farmall M 248 say in reply 28 about the manifold to muffler connection. Watch it and see how it wiggles but is blurred, that’s AI.
Like you, I was convinced at first that it was real by the dust stirred by the hooves. That is part of the trickery of AI, hooks your brain by convincing you the more dramatic damage etc. is real. Then after a few more views I saw something unusual about the darker marks the hooves supposedly made in the road. Then look at reply 19 to see what I notice later after watching it closely.
 
The attachment tries to open with x.com, wtf is that
You must live under a rock! lol x.com is formerly Twitter! Trust me I never had an account, but it was all you heard about for about a month when threats of Twitter going away were circulating. You will probably be given a choice to “get the app” or stay in your browser, just select the latter. People are spying on you anyway, like it or not especially if you have a smart phone.
 
Couple of things don't ring true here. 1st is the other cattle and the guy in the blue shirt and sombrero are completely indifferent to what is supposedly happening just behind them. 2nd is that the tractor is silent after the first blow, usually it takes more than that to kill an engine, plus it should have been in gear with the clutch pushed in when the operator was still one it. When he bails out, it should have gone forward under its own power. Not that it isn't possible that things could have turned out this way, but all three happening kinda defies belief.
 
The fact that the exhaust elbow springs right back into position after every hit and the muffler doesn’t take a lick of damage.
I can see the exhaust stays intact after first hit, then it is broken and moves just as you would expect with force applied and immediately released.
 
I am coming around now to the AI theory, especially if the hood on that tractor flips forward for service. It would have been ripped open and raised up if the force was great enough to lift the tractor.
In reply 9 I made a comment about how realistic the dust from the hooves is. Now after watching closer at about the first hit a rear hoof digs in and the AI generator or editor places a dark mark there as if the hoof dug down to a damp level. Then in the following hit the bulls rear hooves stomp and skid a bit very close to the same spot the dark mark is still showing. However, the later movements of the hooves never reveal dampness.
Hood gets lifted a little more with each hit and comes back down a little after, just as you would expect.
 
Hood gets lifted a little more with each hit and comes back down a little after, just as you would expect.
That’s how AI works, plus a human is editing the video to add in things to increase believability. Such as the dark hoof scratch in the road I mentioned, the puff of exhaust. As far as the exhaust do you have a way to blow up the video? Look at the pipe below the muffler and the U bend during the last two blows from the bull. The second from the last it blurs but magically reappears in roughly the same spot. After the last blow it is just blurry so why? As Jim.ME points out the blue shirt jogger turns into two, look over the bulls back as it is making the last blow.
If you don’t believe this than you are gullible, and AI is going to take you for a ride. AI is a good thing but it can also be used for bad things. Keep on your toes when watching videos it is going to become harder and harder to tell reality from AI make believe.
 
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