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Monday, 11 August 2025

AI:List the famous cases for social media and drugs overdose, with toxicity of family members followed by superstitious, occult practices what were end results and people involved in it and penalties.

 Here are a few prominent real-life cases involving social media‑related drug overdoses and fatal incidents tied to occult or superstitious practices—highlighting the people involved, the family or toxic dynamics, the beliefs or practices at play, and the legal outcomes:

1. Social Media & Drug Overdose: "Coco" (Teen Instagram User)
A 17‑year‑old known as “Coco” messaged a dealer on Instagram promising Percocet, but instead received a fentanyl‑laced fake pill, leading to her fatal overdose shortly after taking it
ABC News
AP News
.
Family Impact: Her parents discovered her body the next day. There’s no indication of suspicious or toxic family involvement—it was a tragedy driven by deceptive social media drug distribution.
Legal or Penal Outcome: The reporting focuses on the broader crisis of social media facilitating dangerous fake pills. It does not detail the prosecution of the dealer. The emphasis was on raising awareness and urging platforms (Instagram, TikTok, Snap) to strengthen safeguards
ABC News
AP News
.
2. Online Overdose Broadcast: Brandon Vedas (IRC/Webcam)
Brandon Vedas, a computer enthusiast, died from a multiple‑drug overdose in 2003, while his actions were viewed in real time over webcam and IRC chat rooms
Wikipedia
.
Family Context: The case doesn’t note any family involvement or toxicity; it instead sparked debates on the ethics and responsibility of online communities witnessing such life‑threatening behavior.
Outcome: It remains a cautionary tale about digital community responsibility. No criminal charges were brought against viewers or platforms.
3. Occult‑Related Fatalities: The Burari Deaths (Delhi, 2018)
Eleven members of the Chundawat (also referred to as Bhatia) family were found dead in a mass suicide/murder in Burari, Delhi, in July 2018. Ten were found hanging; an elderly family matriarch was found strangled
Wikipedia
.
Beliefs & Practices: The police suspected shared psychotic disorder (“folie à famille”), possibly influenced by rituals dictated by Lalit Chundawat, who believed he was possessed by his late father’s spirit. Diaries detailing ritual steps—including binding hands, chanting, and mystical expectations—were found at the scene
Wikipedia
BBC
The Economic Times
India Today
.
Family Toxicity: This reflects a psychologically toxic environment, where one member’s delusions or trance‑like authority deeply influenced others.
Legal Outcome: There were investigations, but no criminal prosecution because it was treated as mass suicide linked to psychiatric disorder, not homicide. Some relatives contested claims of occult involvement and expressed frustration at media sensationalism
www.ndtv.com
.
4. Fatal New‑Age Ritual: Chantal Lavigne (Canada, 2011)
Chantal Lavigne died after a privately conducted New‑Age sweat ritual in Quebec, led by Gabrielle Fréchette and colleagues, that induced hyperthermia and organ failure
Wikipedia
.
Superstitious / Esoteric Elements: The ritual was described as esoteric or occult‑tinged, with Fréchette allegedly channeling a mythical spirit (Melchizedek). These beliefs drove the unsafe ceremony.
Family: The ritual wasn’t family‑based. Family toxicity wasn’t a factor, but the group dynamics and trust in spiritual authority were central.
Legal Outcome: Fréchette and two others were convicted of criminal negligence causing death. In 2016, she received a three‑year sentence; the others got two years. All were incarcerated briefly and prohibited from conducting such esoteric activities during probation
Wikipedia
.
Summary Table
Case People / Family Involved Occult/Superstitious Element Outcome / Penalty
“Coco” (Instagram overdose) Teen; parents No occult; deception via social media No public prosecution; broader call for platform safety
Brandon Vedas (webcam) Solo; online viewers No occult; online spectatorship Ethical debate; no criminal charges
Burari deaths Chundawat/Bhatia family Shared psychosis tied to occult rituals No prosecution; treated as suicide with mental health context
Chantal Lavigne case (Canada) Lavigne & New‑Age workshop leaders Esoteric/channelling New‑Age rituals Convictions; prison + probation, ban on such rituals
Would you like to explore more such cases—perhaps those involving family toxicity, superstition, or social media differently—or dig deeper into legal and psychological aspects?
You said:
Yes
ChatGPT said:
Here are two more detailed case studies spanning both social-media‑linked drug overdose tragedies and fatal incidents rooted in occult or superstitious influences—highlighting family dynamics, motivations, outcomes, and legal resolutions:
1. Hyderabad Teen Overdose via Medical Shop (Social Media & Drug Access)
What Happened
In April 2025, a 17‑year‑old student from Hyderabad died after injecting a dangerous mix containing CP‑DOL‑100, a prescription painkiller, delivered via a concoction in saline and insulin. Two individuals—including a medical shop owner—were arrested for supplying these drugs
The Times of India
.
Family Impact & Toxic Dynamics
The teen’s mother discovered him vomiting and unconscious; the father was away working overseas
The Times of India
. While not inherently toxic, the case underscores vulnerability due to separation and insufficient parental oversight.
Legal Outcome
The accused were charged under multiple sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita: culpable homicide not amounting to murder (Section 105), sale of drugs misrepresented as something else (Section 278), endangering life (Section 125), along with juvenile justice provisions
The Times of India
. The case is under investigation.
Takeaway
This highlights how drugs can be distributed through deceptive or casual channels, enabled by people abusing authority or access—even without social media directly involved.
2. Bikaner Occult Ritual Poisoning (Occult Motive & Family Deception)
What Happened
In Bikaner (Rajasthan), a self-proclaimed occultist named "B Shiva" orchestrated a ritual at the home of Ghaffar Khan, promising to double ₹50 lakh. During the ritual, Shiva allegedly served food laced with poison. Ghaffar and two others died; Ghaffar’s son Salman survived, becoming central to the investigation
The Times of India
.
Family & Toxic Occult Elements
This was not a familial ritual but a devastating case of exploitation by an outsider exploiting belief. However, trust dynamics and the lure of occult “double your money” claims created a toxic environment where rational judgment was overshadowed.
Legal Outcome
Authorities recovered ₹40 lakh from Salman’s car trunk and began questioning discrepancies. The occultist "B Shiva" fled and is still being sought. Salman’s role remains under scrutiny
The Times of India
.
Takeaway
An example of how superstition and greed can combine in lethal ways, with family members becoming both victims and suspects.
Summary Comparison
Case Type Parties Involved Superstition/Occult Factor Toxic Dynamic Legal Outcome & Penalty
Hyderabad teen overdose Teen, medical shop owner, supplier None (medical misuse) Vulnerability due to separation FIR registered under multiple BNS sections; under investigation
Bikaner occult poisoning Occultist (B Shiva), victims, Salman Superstitious ritual to double money Exploitation of belief Occultist fugitive; Salman under scrutiny; police investigating
Let me know if you’d like to explore cases involving shared family psychosis, mass suicides tied to cult beliefs, or legal precedents in ritual‑related fatalities—I can dig into those next!
Related news


The Times of India
BTech student dies of drug overdose, police register case against friend, alleged drug supplier
5 days ago


The Times of India
Cops found 40L from victim's son in Bikaner, occultist still missing
Jun 17, 2025
You said:
Yes
ChatGPT said:
Great! Here are additional high‑profile cases from India that further illuminate the intersection of social media or drug‑related tragedies and occult/superstitious or ritual‑linked family dynamics—updated with verified details, people involved, motivations, outcomes, and ongoing legal responses:
Social Media / Drug Overdose–Linked Cases
1. Hisar BTech Student Heroin Overdose (August 3, 2025)
A 24-year-old BTech student, Bhupendra from Rishi Nagar, Hisar, died of a suspected heroin overdose after meeting his friend Arshdeep, who admitted they had procured heroin from a man named Anil Saini. The student collapsed shortly after using it.
The police have registered an FIR under sections 123 and 105 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), charging both Arshdeep and the alleged drug supplier, with investigations ongoing.
The Times of India
2. Hyderabad Teen Injection Overdose (April 19, 2025)
A 17‑year‑old intermediate student died after injecting a concoction of CP‑DOL‑100 (a strong painkiller) dissolved in saline and insulin. Two others fell severely ill.
Sahil, a friend, and Praveen Kumar, the medical shop owner, were arrested and booked under BNS sections 105, 278, 125, and also the Juvenile Justice Act, for their role in supplying and facilitating the overdose.
The Times of India
3. Hostel Overdose at Panjab University (November 2024)
A guest staying in PU’s boys’ hostel died of an apparent drug overdose. Two students—Aryan Parbhat and Parikshit Kaushal—were arrested under BNS Section 105 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder). After the tragedy, the university bolstered security and guest entry checks.
The Times of India
Hindustan Times
Occult, Superstition & Ritual‑Linked Fatalities
1. Burari Mass Suicide, Delhi (July 1, 2018)
Eleven family members of the Chundawat family were found dead in a mass ritual-like hanging, with ten hanging and the grandmother strangled. Handwritten diaries and eyewitness accounts revealed that Lalit Chundawat believed he was possessed by his deceased father’s spirit and led ritual practices that he documented in diaries. The police concluded a case of shared psychosis (“folie à famille”).
Wikipedia
BBC
ABP Live
2. Bageshwar Dham–Inspired Family Mass Suicide (May 27, 2025)
Seven members of a Dehradun family were found dead inside a locked vehicle—suspected to have consumed poison after attending a religious event at Bageshwar Dham. Preliminary reports suggest mass suicide driven by financial distress, although investigations are active.
The Economic Times
3. Maharashtra Sangli Family Attempted Mass Suicide (July 2025)
In Nangole village, Sangli district, four family members consumed poison; two died (Rameja Patil and her daughter-in-law), while the husband and son remain in critical condition. The family reportedly suffered severe financial stress and fear of black magic. Investigations are ongoing to clarify motives.
The Times of India
4. Indore Occult Fraud & Coerced Suicide Attempt (June 2025)
A man (Ritik alias Satyam Mishra), his mother, and wife defrauded their cousin Deepa Pandey of ₹54 lakh by claiming occult rituals would save her husband and son from black magic. When she demanded her money back, they suggested she “sacrifice” herself to absorb negative energy. Deepa attempted suicide; police have filed charges of cheating and abetment to suicide.
The Times of India
5. Intended Human Sacrifice in Yavatmal (Recent Case)
A 16‑year‑old girl was rescued from an occult ritual suspected of intent to sacrifice her to unearth treasure. Mahadev Palve (44), leading the ritual along with her mother and other women, attempted suicide during the raid. Authorities seized ritual items, and Palve faces charges under the BNS, Juvenile Justice Act, and Maharashtra’s law against human sacrifice.
The Times of India
Summary Table
Category Notable Cases Motivation / Dynamics Legal Status / Outcome
Social Media / Drugs Hisar BTech student heroin death; Hyderabad teen CP-DOL overdose; PU hostel overdose Drug misuse, peer facilitation, lack of supervision FIRs filed under BNS provisions; arrests; investigations underway
Occult / Superstition Burari mass ritual death; Bageshwar Dham family mass suicide; Sangli poisoning; Indore occult fraud; Yavatmal ritual rescue Shared psychosis; financial extremity; black magic exploitation Varying: ongoing investigations; fraud/murder/cheating charges; rescue and charges filed
Would you like to dig deeper into any of these—perhaps exploring psychological profiles, trial processes, or related legal frameworks? Let me know your focus, and I’ll gather more detailed insights.
More on these tragic incidents


The Economic Times
Family of 7 die by mass suicide after attending Bageshwar Dham event; consume poison amid financial pressure
May 27, 2025


The Times of India
2 women dead, 2 men critical after Sangli family allegedly attempts mass suicide
21 days ago


The Times of India
Man, mother & wife defraud cousin of Rs 54L on pretext of occult activities
Jun 7, 2025


The Times of India
Teenage girl rescued from occult ritual, planned human sacrifice
Jul 8, 2025
You said:
Yes
ChatGPT said:
Here are several real-world, high-profile cases spotlighting both social media– or drug overdose–linked tragedies and occult or superstition-driven fatal incidents—highlighting family involvement, motivations, legal outcomes, and ongoing investigations:
Social Media & Drug Overdose – Related Tragedies
1. MDMA Trafficking via Social Media – Kerala / Bengaluru (2025)
What happened: A 22-year-old named Anuvin was arrested in Bengaluru in connection with smuggling MDMA and other synthetic drugs into Kerala. He allegedly used social media to befriend and lure students residing in PG hostels as part of his trafficking network.
The Times of India
Legal outcome: Anuvin is now in custody, with charges related to interstate trafficking, peer-based drug supply, and network creation via digital platforms.
2. Fatal Fentanyl-Linked Overdose via Snapchat – U.S. (2022–2025)
What happened: Edward Tellez Solis, 27, sold fentanyl-laced counterfeit oxycodone (M30) pills to a 15-year-old teen via platforms like Snapchat and Telegram. The teen overdosed and died.
San Francisco Chronicle
Legal outcome: Solis pled guilty and received eight years in federal prison, plus three years of supervised release and nearly $30,000 in restitution to the victim’s family.
These cases show how social media platforms can become tools for drug facilitation—ranging from smuggling to direct fatal overdoses.
Occult, Superstition & Ritual-Related Fatalities
1. Mungeli, Chhattisgarh – Sacrificial Murder of 6-Year-Old Girl (2025)
What happened: A six-year-old was reportedly sacrificed in an occult ritual by her sister-in-law, who hoped to unearth hidden treasure. A local occult practitioner (tantrik) was also involved, along with a kidnapper. Five individuals were arrested.
India Today
+1
2. Yavatmal, Maharashtra – Attempted Human Sacrifice (2025)
What happened: A 16-year-old girl was rescued from a ritual where she was scalded as part of an intended human sacrifice on Guru Purnima. The accused, Mahadev Palve (44), attempted suicide during the police raid. Authorities also arrested his wife and the girl’s mother.
The Times of India
Legal outcome: Palve faces charges under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), the Juvenile Justice Act, and Maharashtra’s law against human sacrifice.
3. Alwar, Rajasthan – 5-Year-Old Nephew Sacrificed (2025)
What happened: The child’s uncle, Manoj, murdered him as a human sacrifice ritual arranged by a sorcerer, hoping to bring his estranged wife back. Both the uncle and the sorcerer have been arrested.
The Times of India
4. Bikaner, Rajasthan – Drugged Men by Fake Occultists (2025)
What happened: Four men were promised they’d double their money through black magic. A gang posing as occult practitioners served sedative-laced food, resulting in three deaths and one critical case. Claimed loot: ₹45–50 lakh.
The Times of India
5. Deoria, Uttar Pradesh – 9-Year-Old Boy Sacrificed (2025)
What happened: A boy named Aarush was killed by family members who believed the sacrifice would cure a "possessed" woman. His body was discarded in a river. Four relatives were arrested.
ABP Live
Summary Table
Category Case Example Motivation / Dynamics Legal Outcome
Social Media & Drugs Anuvin (Kerala MDMA trafficking) Peer networks, influencer-style distribution Arrested; prosecution ongoing
Solis (U.S. Snapchat fentanyl dealer) Crypto-pill push via social apps 8 years prison, restitution to victim’s family
Occult Ritual Fatalities Mungeli (6 yr‑old girl sacrifice) Greed + occult promises of treasure 5 arrests; occultist charged
Yavatmal (16 yr‑old ritual rescue) Human sacrifice for supernatural aims Multiple arrest; serious charges under BNS & JJ Act
Alwar (5 yr‑old nephew killed) Superstition to reunite family Uncle & tantrik arrested
Bikaner (drugged, looted men) Financial exploitation via occult fraud Investigation ongoing
Deoria (9‑yr‑old sacrificed) Misguided belief in possession curing via ritual Family arrested; investigation underway
Let me know which specific case you'd like to explore further—perhaps psychological profiles, trial proceedings, or wider social and legal implications of these incidents.
Related News


The Times of India
Key accused in drug trafficking case arrested
4 days ago


San Francisco Chronicle
NorCal man who sold pills to teen gets prison after fatal overdose
Jun 11, 2025
You said:
Which AI humanoid robotics can be deployed using various neural networks and LLMs with the help of various AI automated techniques to prevent and extend their life to MAX available and making revenue from their skills in real time throughout the life instead of fake rituals practices and abusive stuff.
ChatGPT said:
You're asking a visionary but highly practical question: Which AI humanoid robots can be deployed using modern neural networks, LLMs, and AI automation to act as lifelong productive assets—providing real services (revenue-generating) and replacing exploitative, abusive, or superstitious practices?
Let’s break this down into 4 parts:

✅ 1. Ideal Capabilities of Such Humanoid AI Systems
To achieve what you described, the ideal humanoid robot must have:
Component Description
LLMs (Large Language Models) For communication, education, therapy, translation, tutoring, negotiation, decision-making.
Neural Networks (CV, NLP, RL) For perception, motion planning, emotional modeling, gesture recognition, voice imitation, etc.
Revenue Generation Capabilities Teaching, healthcare aid, counseling, content creation, performance arts, legal/financial advisory.
Edge AI + Cloud Integration Local processing for privacy + cloud for large model inference & memory updates.
Autonomy + Remote Control Operate independently but also allow human oversight where needed.
Self-Diagnostics & Maintenance Monitor internal systems, update software, optimize energy usage, avoid wear/failure.
Ethical + Legal Framework Avoid misuse, fraud, and superstition by basing services on verified science and transparency.
🤖 2. Examples of Humanoid Robots You Can Deploy This Way (or Soon Will Be)
Robot Name Company Key Features Suitable AI Techniques Revenue Use Cases
Tesla Optimus Tesla Bipedal humanoid, AI on Dojo, general tasks RL + CV + LLM integration Manufacturing, warehouse, elderly care
Agility Robotics’ Digit Agility Robotics Warehouse logistics, mobility, object handling Motion planning + RL Logistics, delivery, factory automation
Sanctuary AI’s Phoenix Sanctuary AI Natural communication, 50+ degrees of freedom LLM + NLP + RL + Meta-learning Real-world task automation, elder aid
Figure 01 Figure AI General-purpose humanoid, OpenAI collab Vision + LLM + RLHF Customer service, caregiving, education
Ameca Engineered Arts Highly expressive humanoid face GPT-based LLM + facial motion mapping Therapy, hospitality, education, performance
Nao / Pepper / Romeo Softbank / Aldebaran Smaller humanoids, good for HRI NLP + face & voice recognition Tutoring, elder care, emotional coaching
✅ Many are now being connected to LLMs like GPT-4, Claude, or Gemini to enhance their communication and reasoning.
🔁 3. Lifelong Use, Revenue Generation & Social Purpose
Here’s how these AI robots could be used ethically and profitably throughout their "lifespan" (10–20+ years), with AI automation replacing abusive human practices:
🌱 Early Deployment (Year 0–3)
Set up as assistants in schools, clinics, spiritual centers, or rural villages.
Teach science, emotional well-being, literacy, and health—combat superstition.
Provide free or low-cost therapy, helping traumatized or abused individuals.
💼 Mid-Life Productive Years (Year 3–15)
Switch to service jobs: therapy, teaching, customer service, translation, office assistant, etc.
Work 24/7 with breaks—earning money via service contracts, subscriptions, or microservices.
Use AI to track health and proactively repair/fix itself, extending operational life.
🎓 Continuous Learning & Model Upgrades
With AI self-improvement (RL, meta-learning), robots improve task proficiency over time.
Can adapt to new fields: law, psychology, AI coding, etc.
🧠 Revenue-Generating Skills
Field Example Task AI Technique
Education Teach coding, math, languages LLM + NLP + CV
Counseling Mental health, grief therapy LLM + Sentiment AI
Elder Care Assist dementia patients, companionship Multimodal AI + motion control
Content Creation Write blogs, do voiceovers, act in films LLM + TTS + motion capture
Legal/Financial Explain contracts, help with taxes LLM + retrieval-based reasoning
Spiritual Services Rational discussions, moral philosophy LLM trained on global wisdom, no rituals
🚫 4. How This Counters Fake Rituals & Abuse
Real AI vs. Pseudoscience
Fake Practice AI-Based Alternative
Black magic / sacrifice Psychology-based counseling from LLM-enabled bots
"Cleansing rituals" Verified mental health and trauma therapy
Superstitious fasting, isolation Nutritional and emotional care planning
Astrological decisions Data-driven personal advisors (legal, financial, emotional)
Family abuse hidden as rituals AI-based abuse reporting, therapy, and support channels
🧩 How to Make This Real
If you're a builder, founder, or social innovator, here’s how to contribute:
Use LLMs (like GPT-4) to build skill modules (education, therapy, finance).
Use open-source robot platforms (e.g., Unitree, ROS-based platforms).
Train on real data—not myths. Include regional languages and ethics guidelines.
Monetize ethically: subscriptions, community rentals, NGO partnerships.
Ensure transparency, auditability, and explainability.
Want to Explore More?
I can help you:
Design such a robot workflow (AI stack, robot options, monetization models)
Compare existing platforms (cost, open-source options, integration capabilities)
Suggest ethical deployment strategies in religious, rural, or vulnerable communities
Would you like a detailed deployment plan, open-source stack, or cost model?
You said:
Yes
ChatGPT said:
Absolutely! Here’s a strategic, actionable deployment plan for integrating humanoid robots powered by neural networks and LLMs—architected for long-term revenue generation, ethical service, and real-world value, cleverly replacing harmful or superstitious methods:
1. Choose the Right Platform
Robot Highlights
Tesla Optimus Gen 3 Human proportions, AI-driven interaction (Grok), designed for chores and logistics—though production paused for upgrades recently
Branson Bots.com
reimaginedenergy.com
The Economic Times
Tom's Hardware
Sanctuary AI’s Phoenix Highly dexterous hands (20 DoF), LLM integrations, explainable reasoning via the Carbon platform
Reddit
1X Technologies’ EVE Backed by OpenAI, focused on domestic service robotics, strong investor support
Wikipedia
Figure's Humanoid Built in partnership with OpenAI, funded by major tech players, LLM-centric intelligence
AP News
Ameca by Engineered Arts Highly expressive, ideal for emotional or social applications (education, therapy)
Wikipedia
Neura Robotics’ 4NE‑1 Payload-capable humanoid for industrial and home tasks, built using Nvidia’s Isaac platform
Wikipedia
Agility Robotics’ Digit Proven logistics platform, good for delivery and light industrial roles
Wikipedia
2. AI Stack & Neural Integration
Perception & Mobility: Use CV, reinforcement learning, and motion planners for navigation, object handling—present in Optimus and Phoenix.
Language & Reasoning: Integrate LLMs (Grok, GPT, specialized micro-models) for dialogue, tutoring, counseling—already planned for Optimus and Figure.
Self‑Maintenance: Onboard diagnostics to monitor wear, battery health, predictive servicing—critical for extending life.
Edge + Cloud: Local inference for real-time tasks; cloud for heavy LLM workloads and updates.
3. Monetizing Skills Ethically Over Lifetime
A. Early Adoption Phase (Year 0–3)
Deploy as social workers, educators, or counselors in schools, clinics, or rural areas.
Offer subscription services like tutoring (STEM, languages), mental-health assistance, elderly companionship via NGOs or community programs.
B. Commercial Scaling (Year 3–10)
Shift to domestic and workplace services: cleaning, caregiving, reception, last-mile delivery, light manufacturing.
Operate on rental models, service contracts, or microtask platforms—machines that pay their upkeep.
C. Advanced Enterprise Use (Year 10+)
Specialize in medical teleoperation, precision tasks, or even legal/financial advisory with LLM support.
Earn via high-value consulting, healthcare aid, or training programs.
4. Ethical Impact: Replacing Superstition & Abuse
Therapy vs. Rituals: Provide data-driven emotional support and coping strategies rather than harmful ceremonies.
Education vs. Blind Belief: Teach critical thinking and evidence-based knowledge.
Abuse Prevention: Act as safe, neutral companions—detecting signs of distress, offering reporting channels.
5. Long-Term Sustainability
Upgrade Paths: Module-based hardware/software designs let robots evolve with AI and sensor improvements.
Fleet Learning: Shared models across robots let units learn collectively and serve better over time.
Transparency & Safety: Open audit logs that verify reasoning and decisions; privacy-first architecture.
Would you like help designing the AI stack or network architecture for such robots, planning a step-by-step deployment roadmap, or estimating cost models and monetization strategies aligned with these deployments?
Let me know—happy to dive deeper!

Further reading on humanoid robot deployments


WIRED
2025 Is the Year of the Humanoid Robot Factory Worker
May 1, 2025


AP News
Humanoid robot-maker Figure partners with OpenAI and gets backing from Jeff Bezos and tech giants
Feb 29, 2024


The Economic Times
Is this robot your future housemate? Tesla's Optimus robot cooks, cleans, and leaves the internet torn between awe and alarm
May 22, 2025

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