Exploring Digital Resurrection: Are We Prepared for the Legal Battles Around Consent?

Category Machine Learning

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In a recent study, it was discovered that societal acceptability for digital resurrection is drastically higher when the deceased has given consent. Moreover, most respondents disagreed with their own digital resurrection and 40% of respondents did not find any kind of digital resurrection socially acceptable, even with expressed consent. Thus, highlighting the necessity for ethic and legal work surrounding digital resurrection.


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Should the deceased be digitally resurrected by grieving friends, lovers and relatives? A new study captures current attitudes and highlights the need for urgent research and policy work.

In a 2014 episode of sci-fi series Black Mirror, a grieving young widow reconnects with her dead husband using an app that trawls his social media history to mimic his online language, humor and personality. It works. She finds solace in the early interactions—but soon wants more.

Digital resurrection technologies use AI and machine learning algorithms to create avatars of the deceased

Such a scenario is no longer fiction. In 2017, the company Eternime aimed to create an avatar of a dead person using their digital footprint, but this "Skype for the dead" didn't catch on. The machine-learning and AI algorithms just weren't ready for it. Neither were we.

Now, in 2024, amid exploding use of Chat GPT-like programs, similar efforts are on the way. But should digital resurrection be allowed at all? And are we prepared for the legal battles over what constitutes consent? .

In some countries, the legal status of the digitally resurrected is unclear as no legislation on the issue exists

In a study published in the Asian Journal of Law and Economics, Dr. Masaki Iwasaki of Harvard Law School and currently an assistant professor at Seoul National University, explores how the deceased's consent (or otherwise) affects attitudes to digital resurrection.

U.S. adults were presented with scenarios where a woman in her 20s dies in a car accident. A company offers to bring a digital version of her back, but her consent is, at first, ambiguous. What should her friends decide? .

The ethical implications of digital resurrection are also a major discussion point among experts

Two options—one where the deceased has consented to digital resurrection and another where she hasn't—were read by participants at random. They then answered questions about the social acceptability of bringing her back on a five-point rating scale, considering other factors such as ethics and privacy concerns.

Results showed that expressed consent shifted acceptability two points higher compared to dissent. "Although I expected societal acceptability for digital resurrection to be higher when consent was expressed, the stark difference in acceptance rates—58% for consent versus 3% for dissent—was surprising," says Iwasaki. "This highlights the crucial role of the deceased's wishes in shaping public opinion on digital resurrection." .

Not all countries are willing to embrace the technology due to religious and cultural restrictions

In fact, 59% of respondents disagreed with their own digital resurrection, and around 40% of respondents did not find any kind of digital resurrection socially acceptable, even with expressed consent. "While the will of the deceased is important in determining the societal acceptability of digital resurrection, other factors such as ethical concerns about life and death, along with general apprehension towards new technology are also significant," says Iwasaki.

Eternime, the company that launched 'Skype for the dead' in 2017, was unable to gain a foothold due to technical difficulties at the time

The results reflect a discrepancy between existing law and public sentiment. People's general feelings—that the dead's wishes should be respected—are actually not protected in most countries. The digitally recreated John Lennon in the film Forrest Gump, or animated hologram of Amy Winehouse reveal the "rights" of the dead are easily overridden by those in the land of the living.

So, is your digital destiny something to consider when writing your will? It probably should be but in the current absencce of legislation, it will be hard to guarantee it.

The latest research shows that 59% of respondents disagreed with their own digital resurrection

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