A tour website called Tasmania Tours had to remove an article after it gave wrong travel information. The article, created by artificial intelligence, said Weldborough in Tasmania had hot springs. It called Weldborough Hot Springs a "secluded forest retreat" with "therapeutic minerals." But there are no hot springs there. Tourists started visiting the small town asking for the pools. Locals, including Kristy Probert, who runs the Weldborough Hotel, were confused. She told ABC: "I actually had a group of 24 drivers turn up there two days ago that were on a trip from the mainland, and they’d actually taken a detour to come to the hot springs." She explained the only water nearby is the cold Weld River. She joked, "If you find the hot springs, come back and let me know and I’ll shout you beers all night, they didn’t come back." Scott Hennessy, owner of Tasmania Tours, admitted the AI made a big mistake. The company had outsourced marketing content to a third party using AI. Some posts went live without full checks. He said, "Our AI has messed up completely." He stressed the company is real and sells genuine tours. All AI content is now under review. Experts warn AI errors in travel content are rising. Anne Hardy from Destination Southern Tasmania said almost 90% of AI-made itineraries have at least one error. Some travelers rely heavily on AI trip plans. Similar false locations have been reported worldwide, confusing tourists. This incident shows that travelers should be careful as not all online content created by AI is accurate or true.