The advent of advanced artificial intelligence has led to an ever-growing number of people and researchers alike to try and preserve their lives infinitely, by transferring and storing their memories in the forms of AI bots, algorithms and holograms; and not just themselves, but digital forms of their riches and material gain.

The WinePress has covered this in a number of reports:

SEE: Must Read: Tech And Financial Gurus Seek To Leverage AI To Live Forever And Preserve Their Wealth

Google Founder And Silicon Valley Artificial Intelligence Engineers Admit ‘We’re Creating God’

Spanish Woman Becomes First To Marry AI Hologram To ‘Satisfy All Of Her Emotional Needs,’ Marketed As ‘Future Of Love’

A Growing Number Of People Are Turning To AI To Talk To Their Dead Loved Ones, And Trying To Live Forever

Tens Of Thousands Turn To AI Companions And Partners To Combat Loneliness In Dystopian Reality

Several weeks ago The Atlantic ran a headline talking about the prospects of some people trying to attain immortality.

The article follows the ambitions of Hany Farid (58), an AI expert at UC Berkeley, who has said that he wants his wife (38) to ‘resurrect’ him as an AI after he passes. “My wife has my voice, my likeness, and a lot of my writings,” he told The Atlantic. “She could very easily train a large language model to be an interactive version of me.” 

“We have very conflicting feelings about it,” he added. “I imagine that in the coming five to 10 years, it is a conversation we’re going to have the same way we have other conversations about end of life.”

The Atlantic goes on to explain who this digital immortality and so-called “deathbots” might work:


[…] As people get their affairs in order, there are lots of reasons they should take into account the possibility of deathbots. Some wills already include instructions for social-media profiles, emails, and password-protected cellphones; language about AI could be next. Perhaps you might set specific guidelines for how your digital remains can be repurposed for a deathbot. Or you might forgo digital immortality entirely and issue what’s essentially a digital “do not resuscitate.”

“You could put an instruction in your estate plan like ‘I don’t want anybody to do this,’” Stephen Wu, a lawyer at Silicon Valley Law Group, told me, regarding deathbots. “But that’s not necessarily enforceable.”

Telling your loved ones that you don’t want to be turned into an AI clone may not stop someone from going rogue and doing it anyway. If they did, the only legal recourse would be in instances where the AI clone was used in a way that violates a law. For instance, a voice clone could be employed to access a deceased person’s private accounts. Or an AI replica could be used for commercial purposes, in an ad, say, or on a product label, which would violate the person’s basic right of publicity. But of course, that’s little help for lots of harmful ways in which someone could interact with a deathbot.

Like so much else in the world of AI, many of the concerns about these replicas are still hypothetical. But if deathbots continue to gain traction, “we’re going to see a slew of new AI laws,” Thomas Dunlap, a lawyer at the firm Dunlap, Bennett, and Ludwig, told me.

Perhaps even weirder than a world in which deathbots exist is a world in which they are normal. By the time today’s children reach the end of their life, these kinds of digital ghosts could conceivably be as much a part of the grieving process as physical funerals. “Technology tends to go through these cycles,” Farid said. “There’s this freak-out, and then we figure it out; we normalize it; we put reasonable guardrails on it. I suspect we’ll see something like that here.”

However, the road ahead is bumpy. Part of you can still live on, based on texts, emails, and whatever else makes up your digital footprint. It’s something that future generations may have to keep in mind before they fire off an angry social-media post at an airline. Beyond just “What does this say about me now?,” they may have to ask themselves, “What will this say about me when I’m gone?”


AUTHOR COMMENTARY

For the idols have spoken vanity, and the diviners have seen a lie, and have told false dreams; they comfort in vain: therefore they went their way as a flock, they were troubled, because there was no shepherd.

Zechariah 10:2

This stuff is so silly, and the people who are convincing themselves that they can live forever prove they are indeed FOOLS in the truest sense of the word.

Try as they might, they still will die, and their memories will fade and vanish.

Ecclesiastes 9:5 For the living know that they shall die: but the dead know not any thing, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten. [6] Also their love, and their hatred, and their envy, is now perished; neither have they any more a portion for ever in any thing that is done under the sun.

Oh how easy salvation of the Lord is!? It could not be any simpler. Jesus of course said: “Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life” (John 5:24). But, nope, these weirdos would rather chose the ultra hard way to live forever, but are still going to fail!

Nevertheless this is the grim future that we will witness before the Lord catches us up and resurrects us from this earth (assuming we even live long enough to see some of this come to fruition) is coming, and I don’t doubt will be a reality.


[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

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2 Comments

  • Being saved on the internet is not living forever, it’s just a recording that can be erased and most likely be deleted, so sorry to burst their bubble.
    Heb_9:27  And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment:

    That’s the facts Jack

  • Once you’re dead, you either live in Heaven if you accepted Lord Jesus Christ as your Saviour, He died and rose again, for us, and suffered terribly for us
    Or Eternal death in Hell, until the Great White Throne Judgement and thrown into the Lake of Fire for all eternity

    Accept The Lord Jesus and live with Him in Heaven, love and obey Him as He loves us so very much

    These foolish people that want their things turned into digital stuff reminds me of the Ancient Egyptians who had all their stuff buried with them for the afterlife…
    You can’t take anything from this world with you… and the things of this world are garbage compared to what awaits those that repent and give their lives to Christ

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