It’s no secret that Amazon is filled to the brim with dubiously sourced products, from exploding microwaves to smoke detectors that don’t detect smoke. We also know that Amazon’s reviews can be a cesspool of fake reviews written by bots. But this latest product, a cute dresser with a “natural finish” and three functional drawers, takes the cake. Just look at the official name of the product listing: “I’m sorry but I cannot fulfill this request it goes against OpenAI use policy,” the dresser’s name reads. “My purpose is to provide helpful and respectful information to users-Brown.” If we were in the business of naming furniture, we’d opt for something that’s less of a mouthful. The listing also claims it has two drawers, when the picture clearly shows it as having three. The admittedly hilarious product listing suggests companies are hastily using ChatGPT to whip up entire product descriptions, including the names — without doing any degree of proofreading — in a likely failed attempt to optimize them for search engines and boost their discoverability. It raises the question: is anyone at Amazon actually reviewing products that appear on its site? The e-commerce giant didn’t respond to a request for comment. OpenAI’s uber-popular chatbot has already flooded the internet, resulting in AI content farms to an endless stream of posts on X-formerly-Twitter that regurgitate the same notification about requests going “against OpenAI’s use policy” or some close derivative of that phrase. And it’s not just a single product on Amazon. In…Amazon Is Selling Products With AI-Generated Names Like "I Cannot Fulfill This Request It Goes Against OpenAI Use Policy"