Key points:
- Chinese companies are offering AI-generated avatars of deceased loved ones for grief support and companionship.
- The technology uses photos, videos, and voice recordings to create interactive digital clones.
- Prices for these services have dropped significantly, making them more accessible to the general public.
- The practice builds on Chinese cultural traditions of communicating with the dead.
- Ethical concerns include consent, data privacy, and the potential impact on the grieving process.
Chinese companies are now offering services that create AI-generated avatars of deceased loved ones, providing a new way for people to process grief and maintain connections with those they’ve lost.
This emerging industry, sometimes referred to as “digital resurrection” or “digital immortality,” is rapidly growing in China, with at least half a dozen companies now offering such services.
The technology behind these digital avatars combines advanced AI techniques, including diffusion models for generating realistic images and large language models for conversation capabilities.
By using photos, videos, voice recordings, and text messages from the deceased, these companies can create interactive digital replicas that aim to mimic the appearance, voice, and even personality of the lost loved one.
Sun Kai, co-founder of Silicon Intelligence, a Nanjing-based AI company, has personally experienced the impact of this technology. After his mother’s sudden death in 2019, Sun used his company’s resources to create a digital avatar of her. He now speaks with this avatar weekly, finding comfort in the familiar phrases and mannerisms it reproduces.
“I do not treat [the avatar] as a kind of digital person. I truly regard it as a mother,” Sun explains. “I feel that this might be the most perfect person to confide in, without exception.”
The market for these services is particularly strong in China, where cultural traditions have long emphasized maintaining connections with ancestors. Sima Huapeng, CEO of Silicon Intelligence, notes that even if only 1% of the Chinese population embraces this technology, it represents a significant market opportunity.
In recent years, the cost of creating these digital avatars has dropped dramatically. What once cost thousands of dollars can now be done for a few hundred, making the technology increasingly accessible to the general public. This price reduction is largely due to competition among Chinese AI companies and advancements in the underlying technologies.
However, the rise of this industry has also sparked ethical debates. Questions of consent, data privacy, and the potential psychological impact on grieving individuals are at the forefront of these discussions.
Some experts, like Tsinghua University professor Shen Yang, warn that constant interaction with digital replicas of the deceased might prevent people from fully processing their grief and moving forward with their lives.
“The controversy lies in the fact that if we replicate our family members because we miss them, we may constantly stay in the state of mourning and can’t withdraw from it to accept that they have truly passed away,” Shen explains.
Despite these concerns, many users find comfort in the technology. Jonathan Yang, a resident of Nanjing, used a service to create deepfaked video calls of his deceased uncle to protect his elderly grandmother from the shock of loss. While controversial, Yang believes this application of AI technology “best represents the warmth” it can provide.
For now, companies like Silicon Intelligence and Super Brain continue to refine their offerings, while users like Sun Kai find solace in the digital echoes of their loved ones.
As this technology becomes more prevalent, it will undoubtedly spark further discussions about the nature of memory, the ethics of AI, and the future of grief in the digital age.