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Bianca Bosker

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Social Media for Your Social Afterlife

Posted: 02/21/2013 4:45 pm

In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a test to measure the intelligence of machines, one that's still in use today. If a human couldn't distinguish a computer from a human in a text-based conversation, Turing theorized, the machine could be said to be "thinking."

Now consider this: What if you couldn't distinguish your own words from a machine pretending to be you? Would you let a machine do your thinking? And your socializing?

These questions aren't as hypothetical as they might seem.

LivesOn, a social media service-cum-publicity stunt, is using artificial intelligence to mimic individuals' Twitter activity in order to help people keep socializing online -- even once they're six feet under.

"When your heart stops beating, you'll keep tweeting" reads the tagline for LivesOn, which promises to maintain your "social afterlife."

The brainchild of London advertising agency Lean Mean Fighting Machine, LivesOn promises to learn your "likes, tastes, syntax" on Twitter; compose tweets and post retweets that replicate the pattern of your own; then post those messages from your account after you've kicked the bucket. The service, which is being developed with Queen Mary, University of London, has not yet launched, though already several thousand potential users have registered their interest.

"There's so much data and information people are posting and sharing about themselves ... And we thought, 'What is this going to mean for us, as a species, in evolutionary terms? What constitutes you? And what will constitute you in the future?'" said Lean Mean Fighting Machine creative partner Dave Bedwood of the inspiration for LivesOn. "This could be an early version of the Matrix."

As absurd as the concept may sound, LivesOn takes current trends in social media to their logical extreme.

Technology has already enabled us to transcend the boundaries of time and space to socialize, virtually, with people who aren't with us, physically. We carry our extended social circles with us wherever we go, so that while at dinner with a date, we can simultaneously mingle with hundreds of other people and, just by tapping Instagram or Twitter's real time feed of photos and posts, share in thousands of other moments taking place right at that instant.

As cyborg anthropologist Amber Case argued in a 2010 TED Talk, while other technology enhanced our physical abilities, online social networks have allowed for the "extension of the mental self," and endowed us each with a "second self" that's always up to hang out with someone online. "Whether you like it or not," Case explained, "you're starting to show up online, and people are interacting with your second self when you're not there."

Already, when it comes to engaging with others online, our presence is optional. Our consciousness -- and pulse -- could be unnecessary soon, too.

Bedwood hopes that "as years go by, your LivesOn will become almost like an online twin." We may not be able to live forever (though people in Silicon Valley are also working to remedy that), but we could keep up the appearance of immortality online, as author Nicholas Carr noted in a blog post on LivesOn. We take it for granted that information lives forever online. As LivesOn goes to show, people can live forever online, too.

Carr, who compares LivesOn to a "simulated Singularity," observes:

As more and more of our earthly self comes to be defined by our online profiles and postings, our digital garb, then it becomes a relatively easy task for a computer to replicate that self, dynamically and without interruption, after we're gone. As long as you keep posting, liking, and tweeting, spewing links to funny GIFs and trenchant longform texts, circulating the occasional, digitally fabricated instagram photo or vine video, your friends and acquaintances will never need know that your body has shuffled off the stage. For all social intents and purposes -- and what other intents and purposes are there? -- you'll live forever. I update, therefore I am.

Facebook, always on the bleeding edge of social norms, is already digitally resuscitating the dead, often in ways people find ghoulish or creepy. A colleague recently complained that she saw her deceased friend appear on the margins of her News Feed for having "liked" a brand that was advertising on the site. The social network made it appear as if he was still active on the site.

With its frictionless sharing and auto-posting apps, Facebook has also automated some of our posting on our behalf, letting us stay active on the site even when we're not on the social network (or, put another way, ensuring we can be social at all times, even when we're not socializing). Twitter users needn't despair: Bedwood said that the living could use his company's service to keep up their patter online.

And it seems people are quite content to carry on conversations with artificially intelligent approximations of ourselves. People are getting seduced by spambots, as the Tumblr "Okc_ebooks" goes to show. The blog features instant message exchanges with male online daters on OkCupid who, unbeknownst to them, were corresponding with Horse_ebooks, a Twitter bot that spews gibberish culled from ebooks. Though some of the men suspected there was something a bit off about their conversation partner, others flirted back. "Are you a poet?" one asked. Another went straight for, "yeah so wanna get f**ked?"

Will we like our automated alter-egos better than we like ourselves? Twitter, Facebook and Instagram could end up as social networks for our AI identities, with bots chatting to bots, liking each others' tweets and becoming best online friends on our behalf. Maybe that lets us focus on our dinner dates. Or maybe we'll find companionship with the algorithms.

 
 
 

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In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a test to measure the intelligence of machines, one that's still in use today. If a human couldn't distinguish a computer from a human in a text-based conversation, Turin...
In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a test to measure the intelligence of machines, one that's still in use today. If a human couldn't distinguish a computer from a human in a text-based conversation, Turin...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cruzzer101
You don't have to be insane to be crazy.
3 hours ago ( 5:25 PM)
"The Rise of the Machine" . . .

How long before these machines start "Tweeting", "Liking", and "Friending" one another?

The revolution is on. Just wait for A.I. Then us human beings will *really* be taking a back seat - the next step on our way to evolution - and/or extinction.

"And once everyone is 'uploaded' . . . then the power goes out. And it's the end of the human race." (a quote from some sci-fi story I once read).
6 hours ago ( 2:58 PM)
Jumping a little ahead of time there. Where is the evidence in life after death? I believe in life "before" death. No skeptics there.
9 hours ago (12:17 PM)
If people are willing to pay for a simulacrum, other people will build it and charge them for it.
10 hours ago (10:24 AM)
Why would I want to keep tweeting pictures of my junk after I'm dead? Some one please explain...
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Henk
I like your Christ, I don't like your Christians..
12 hours ago ( 9:17 AM)
Just like the NRA, you may die, but you will still be counted as a member.
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hat1701d
We're all just one flush away....
20 hours ago (12:58 AM)
We are slowly making are selves more and more irrelevant. Soon, and probably closer than we think, machines will be us. There will be no need for us at all. They can "be us" after we are dead...why, when they can simply be us why we are living? We have drones in development that can fly missions completely independently without human intervention. California seriously wants cars on the road that drive without humans in control......Might as well simply sign the planet over to machines completely. We won't have to go to war with them. We are designing them into existence and building them to think like us, to be able to act like us but do things we never could ( like fly ). "Here, we put ourselves in your capable hands......said the creators to their future masters".
05:13 PM on 02/22/2013
Ghost in the machine.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
easarsfield
Work in Tech at the GRAMMYS. Thoughts my own.
01:55 PM on 02/22/2013
The only thing possibly more creepy than LivesOn tweeting on your behalf is actually tweeting from beyond the veil......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
12:27 PM on 02/22/2013
Sheldon on the Big Bang Theory wants to live long enough to see a machine invented where his brain can be downloaded into it, thus he has immortality. Until we get there, this I suppose is the second best thing we can achieve.
10:47 AM on 02/22/2013
I thought it was creepy when Facebook suggested that I friend someone whose funeral I had attended. I really don't imagine many people want a machine to take over tweeting and posting for them after they've shuffled off the mortal thngie.
09:12 AM on 02/22/2013
Ok, now this is just too much. Let us RIP for heaven's sake!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lea Santello
social worker and social justice junkie
12:07 PM on 02/22/2013
No pun intended.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marie Russell-Barker
Grandmother, Greatgrandmother.
11:37 PM on 02/21/2013
I asked a question of those who signed up with this program let me turn that question around what's the matter with me for asking that and writing an openion on the subject in the first place must be very board!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marie Russell-Barker
Grandmother, Greatgrandmother.
11:31 PM on 02/21/2013
When I die let me go no machines I will be remembered by those who loves me. I agree that I am always responding to silly article like this but it's a way of passing time. The people thoughts on and writings are real to me. No I will not be signing up for these programs scaring the hell out of my loved ones. To those who have already signed up what's the matter with you?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mara Mason
Common sense is not so common...
10:35 PM on 02/21/2013
I wonder, when it comes to private messages (direct messages, "chats" whatever you want to call them) will there be a response? I can understand updating posts like twitter, but I don't see how facebook or messaging is going to work.
Also, won't this freak people out who were at your funeral? LOL
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Purple Flag
I'm a force of chaos, not an abomination.
10:05 PM on 02/21/2013
Dirk Strider's autoresponder hahahaha...All the Homestuck feels.