TY - JOUR TI - Digital Afterlife and the Future of Collective Memory AU - Meitzler, Matthias AU - Heesen, Jessica AU - Hennig, Martin AU - Quinn, Regina Ammicht PY - 2024 PB - Brill AB - Abstract
Digital technology increasingly addresses people dealing with dying, death and grief. The range of options now extends to ai-based forms of "digital afterlife", in which the deceased are represented digitally in the form of a chatbot or avatar. Based on large amounts of personal data, they can simulate the person's communicative behavior, including their visual appearance, thus enabling him or her to interact with users. The applications of the so-called Digital Afterlife Industry not only offer new possibilities in the fields of grief culture, the education sector, and the entertainment industry, but also raise ethical, legal and security-related questions that have so far received little attention. At the intersection of technological innovation (especially artificial intelligence), cultures of mourning and collective memory, this article discusses the (potential) social effects of a digital afterlife and its implication in terms of memory. We will particularly address the fact that more and more people in their everyday life are able to use a digital public representation, which continues after their death and with which users can interact. UR - https://doi.org/10.1163/29498902-202400013 DO - 10.1163/29498902-202400013 T2 - Memory Studies Review SN - 2949-8902 SP - 1-18 UR - https://www.pollux-fid.de/r/cr-10.1163/29498902-202400013 H1 - Pollux (Fachinformationsdienst Politikwissenschaft) ER -