Startup Out of MIT Promises Digital Afterlife — Just Hand Over Your Data
v3rgEz writes "A new startup out of MIT offers early adopters a chance at the afterlife, of sorts: It promises to build an AI representation of the dearly departed based on chat logs, email, Facebook, and other digital exhaust generated over the years. "Eterni.me generates a virtual YOU, an avatar that emulates your personality and can interact with, and offer information and advice to your family and friends after you pass away," the team promises. But can a chat bot plus big data really produce anything beyond a creepy, awkward facsimile?"
Holy balls that is creepy. At best, this would really weird people out who knew the dearly departed. At worst, it would provide a hook for traumatized loved ones to avoid dealing with the grief and get increasingly bottled up in a fantasy world.
It is difficult for me to imagine ways in which this would be a good thing.
You're right. Channel 4 (UK) Black Mirror - Episode 1: "Martha and Ash are a young couple who move to a remote cottage. The day after the move, Ash is killed, returning the hire van. At the funeral, Martha's friend Sarah tells her about a new service that lets people stay in touch with the deceased. By using all his past online communications and social media profiles, a new 'Ash' can be created. Martha is disgusted by the concept but then in a confused and lonely state she decides to talk to 'him'..." Definitively worth watching.
Can I get this before I die? I hate talking with people sometimes.
Tell me more about can a chat bot plus big data really produce anything beyond a creepy, awkward facsimile?
Mind the Gap
Caprica. Watch it. Doesn't end well.
I don't know... most of the people I know that use Twitter and Facebook heavily have slightly less personality than most software.
This is the basis of S02E01 of "Black Mirror"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...
The episode did a pretty good representation of the idea, showing things that the the dearly departed's avatar would know and not know based on their chat and email history.
I'm inclined to think that in general, people who act like dicks on the internet are actually dicks in real life who at best, possibly for reasons of conformity, may just be curbing their tendency towards being a dick around people they meet in real life to avoid the potential social and cultural complications. That doesn't mean that's who they really are, however.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
No, it cannot. Once you're dead, you're dead. Game over.
True that. I doubt any software can truly emulate the nuance of human personality based solely on pictures and tweets.
Actually it is worse than that. People should learn to grieve and then go on with their lives. A bot would only hinder this necessary mental healing process.
`echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
I just want it to keep updating my FB status with predetermined posts such as, "Wow! Who knew they had free Wi-Fi up here?"
An argument has been made (by both myself and others) that at least one slashdot user is a script already. Not necessarily an intelligent one, but a script nonetheless.
Does it bother you that an argument has been made (by both yourself and others) that at least one slashdot user is a script already?
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).