Speaking to the Dead is Now Possible
AI advancements bring voices of departed loved ones back to life
Ric Edelman: It's Monday, March 25th. On today's show, thanks to AI, you can talk with your loved ones, even if they're deceased. A year ago, when ChatGPT first came out, you might remember a podcast I did that blew people's minds. I wanted to demonstrate how big a deal this new technology is. So I had ChatGPT write the script for the show. I simply typed, “write a script on AI in the style of Rick Edelman.” I got the result in about 30 seconds, and it was free. And then I copied the text and pasted it into another AI website, Eleven Labs. I then uploaded three of my podcast episodes. And then I told Eleven Labs to record the script in my voice. That took about five minutes, and it cost me five dollars. And when I played the recording on my podcast the next day, nobody knew that it wasn't me. Not my producer of 30 years, not even my wife, Jean. She figured out after about a minute that there was something off, but she couldn't put her finger on it. That was a year ago.
Today, look what the tech is able to do. How would you like to have a conversation with a loved one who's died? Now someone's building an AI chatbot that will let you do this. You'll upload recordings you have of your deceased mom or dad, or grandmom, or best friend. And this new AI chatbot will let you have conversations with them. It's called Project December. The price will be just $10.
The problem is that in addition to uploading their voice, if you really want them to sound like them, you'll need to upload facts about them, too. Not just their age and where they lived, what they did for a living, but their views as well. Political, social, leisure, you name it. And here's the thing. If your loved one's data is still on the internet, if all their social media accounts are still accessible, then the AI chatbot will find all that out. Everything about them and all their attitudes and views about everybody and everything. The AI Chatbot will be able to use this to replicate these folks in your conversations.
Is this exciting or creepy and will it catch on? What are the implications? Here's a thought. What if a scammer finds out that your husband has died, grabs his voice from his social media accounts, and starts sending you messages that are seemingly from him? Telling you that he can't get to heaven unless you send money to some website, or hey, honey, if you're listening to this, it means I've died, and here's an important message for you. You think any crook might do that? You think anybody might fall for it? Both are a good bet. This is just another example of how AI Is changing everything. And like every other technological innovation, it'll have pluses and minuses with lots of calls for regulation along the way. Still, I think a lot of people, if given the chance to have a conversation with a departed loved one, they'll jump at it. Maybe you will too.
On tomorrow's show, appropriately so, how to protect yourself from scams. It's not getting any easier.
-----
Subscribe to podcast updates: https://form.jotform.com/223614751580152
Ask Ric: https://www.thetayf.com/pages/ask-ric
-----
Links from today's show:
An Important Crypto Message (4/10/23 Episode - done by ChatGPT): https://www.thetayf.com/blogs/this-weeks-stories/an-important-crypto-message?_pos=18&_sid=0d06b170e&_ss=r
-----
Follow Ric on social media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RicEdelman
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ric_edelman/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ricedelman/
X: https://twitter.com/ricedelman
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RicEdelman
-----
Brought to you by:
Invesco QQQ: https://www.invesco.com/qqq-etf/en/home.html
Schwab: https://www.schwab.com/
Disclosure page: https://www.thetayf.com/pages/sponsorship-disclosure-fee
-----