Paper ID: 2402.01662
Generative Ghosts: Anticipating Benefits and Risks of AI Afterlives
Meredith Ringel Morris, Jed R. Brubaker
As AI systems quickly improve in both breadth and depth of performance, they lend themselves to creating increasingly powerful and realistic agents, including the possibility of agents modeled on specific people. We anticipate that within our lifetimes it may become common practice for people to create a custom AI agent to interact with loved ones and/or the broader world after death; indeed, the past year has seen a boom in startups purporting to offer such services. We call these "generative ghosts," since such agents will be capable of generating novel content rather than merely parroting content produced by their creator while living. In this paper, we reflect on the history of technologies for AI afterlives, including current early attempts by individual enthusiasts and by startup companies to create generative ghosts. We then introduce a novel design space detailing potential implementations of generative ghosts, and use this taxonomy to ground discussion of the practical and ethical implications of various approaches to designing generative ghosts, including potential positive and negative impacts on individuals and society. Based on these considerations, we lay out a research agenda for the AI and HCI research communities to better understand the risk/benefit landscape of this novel technology so as to ultimately empower people who wish to create and interact with AI afterlives to do so in a safe and beneficial manner.
Submitted: Jan 14, 2024