>>126391,
>>126394 A computer scientist claims humans will live on digitally by the end of this year
APR 11 by MAGGIE HARRISON
Tech Guy Changes Mind About Emulating Dead Parents After Watching “Black Mirror” Episode"I get it now."
Talk about a change of heart.
Just days after tweeting that tech designed to emulate dead loved ones would be available to the "masses" by the end of the year, Pratik Desai, a computer scientist and AI investor, has done a full 180 — and all it took was watching a single "Black Mirror" episode.
Investors are eager to find ways to extend life beyond death by making use of AI technology. Though specifics vary between projects — from disembodied voices that were trained on data collected before their death, to metaverse-based avatars — the idea is generally the same: with enough data, you can recreate a version of human consciousness with the use of AI algorithms.
That also means there's no need to say goodbye. Here they are in lines of code, always there when you want to talk.
"Start regularly recording your parents, elders and loved ones," computer scientist and AI investor Pratik Desai tweeted on Friday. "With enough transcript data, new voice synthesis and video models, there is a 100 percent chance that they will live with you forever after leaving physical body."
"This," he added, "should be even possible by end of the year."
The "Black Mirror" episode, titled "Be Right Back," questions the ethics of tech like this. It follows a character named Martha, who turns to a text-bot service after losing her partner, Ash, in an accident, which later turns into a voice chat and eventually a physical android representation of her deceased partner.
It's a harrowing narrative that reflects the broader concerns surrounding this unsettling tech, which could stand to have a major impact on the way that we grieve and remember our loved ones. What does tech like this do to the process of grieving itself? What happens if there's a glitch in the system, and you lose your mom all over again?
And on the privacy side, who's collecting and storing data for these binary purgatories? What about the consent of the deceased?
Unsurprisingly, a number of users jumped into Desai's replies to raise these and other questions, with several "Black Mirror" fans urging Desai to watch the episode for himself.
Desai apparently did, and as of last night, he was singing a remarkably different tune.
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