People are turning to chatbot impersonations of lost loved ones to help them grieve. Will AI help us live after we’re dead?

When Sunshine Henle’s mother, Linda, died unexpectedly at the age of 72, Henle, a 42-year-old Floridian, was left with what she describes as a “gaping hole of silence” in her life.

Even though Linda had lived in New York, where she worked as a Sunday school teacher, the pair had kept in constant contact through phone calls and texting. “I always knew she was there, no matter what – if I was upset, or if I just needed to talk. She would always respond,” says Henle.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Like the 80s, Liverpool faces a tough opponent, but now it feels different

Militant emerged here amid the ravages of economic decline. A new self-confidence…

Ofgem may be busy, but it must address Martin Lewis’s points | Nils Pratley

If the consumer champion is right, it seems many of the energy…

WhatsApp trick totally changes how you listen to voice notes – and lets you listen in secret

DID you know that you don’t have to blast out WhatsApp voice…

Liverpool v Manchester City: great games in the Klopp-Guardiola era

We look back on five Premier League encounters that have made this…