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 ai resurrection


'The Dead Have Never Been This Talkative': The Rise of AI Resurrection

TIME - Tech

On June 18, AI image-generation company Midjourney released a tool that lets users create short video clips using their own images as a template. Days later, Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian posted on X about how he used the tech to animate a photo of his late mother, which shows him as a child wrapped in her embrace. In the artificial video, she laughs and smiles before rocking him in her arms. "Damn, I wasn't ready for how this would feel," he wrote. "This is how she hugged me.


China has a flourishing market for deepfakes that clone the dead

MIT Technology Review

Deepfake technologies have evolved to the point where it's now easy and affordable to clone people's looks and voices with AI. Meanwhile, large language models mean it's more feasible than ever before to conduct full conversations with AI chatbots. I just published a story today about the burgeoning market in China for applying these advances to re-create deceased family members. Thousands of grieving individuals have started turning to dead relatives' digital avatars for conversations and comfort. Chinese people have always liked to tell lost loved ones what has happened since they passed away.