BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  With AI, is death a construct?
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 18 Feb 2026 09:49:06 -0500
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Meta could make social media posting immortal - and we should all cancel our
Facebook accounts right now

Opinion By Lance Ulanoff published 22 hours ago

When it comes to AI, death may be nothing more than a construct

The question of whether we'll be uploading our consciousness to a computer is
no longer if. It's probably when. That's because these digital consciousnesses
- our essences - will likely be the product of an AI's interpretation of
ourselves. The breadcrumbs we'll leave across digital files, images, videos,
audio recordings, and, of course, all that social media will be an ample
resource to reconstruct you.

The idea is not new, but in recent months it's gathered fresh steam as
companies like Meta look at ways to formalize the process. According to
Business Insider (as spotted by Dexerto), Meta is trying to patent a process
for using a large language model (LLM) to recreate a persona on social media
after the person has died.

Currently, Meta lets you "memorialize" a deceased relative's account,
essentially cryo-freezing the account and all its posts in perpetuity. I
support this process, since I think it's quite similar to the dusty photo album
you have on the shelf that features photos of Gramma, Grandpa, and other
long-lost relatives, all frozen in time at the beach, on a walk, playing with
their grandkids, and generally living their lives.

The new plan, though, could be something different. Imagine this version of the
account as a personalized AI agent, capable of posting, responding, reacting,
chatting, and commenting in ways that mimic how a living Facebook member would.

Instead of imagining Grandma at home on her comfy couch, peering over bifocals
as she carefully pecks out a response to the artwork her grandchild just posted
on Instagram, think of a server with a process that notices a post in the now
deceased grandma's network feed. It doesn't post right away because Grandma
never did. Instead, it waits an average of one to several weeks (Grandma used
to like posts from as far back as a year) and then adds her signature heart and
cake emojis (no one ever figured out why Grandma kept posting cake emojis).

That post might give you a fleeting warm feeling before you remember Grandma's
been gone for a year.

A patent but not a plan

Meta isn't, the report notes, implementing this patent. In fact, there's no
direct evidence they'll ever do it, aside from the fact that Meta might invest
$140B in AI this year alone, and the company, like OpenAI, Microsoft, Google,
and Anthropic, is in a fast-paced, intense AI race. Leaving this capability on
the table, when others might race to implement it, seems like a strategic
mistake, and one I'm not sure Meta is willing to make.

Even if Meta chooses to steer clear, nothing will stop AI's progress in this
realm. AI Time promises that AI's replicant capabilities today will be nothing
compared to what we see in a few months.

Today's AI is already proving quite adept at recreating voices, images, and
videos of living and dead people. Just this month, ByteDance's Seedance
achieved new, disturbing levels of vermiseltude.

Death is just a state of an AI mind

On the other side of all these stunning AI advancements is humanity's own
obsession with mortality. Death remains a taboo subject, largely because no one
knows what comes after, and, for the living, the loss and absence of loved ones
is an immutable pain.

It's probably why there are so many books about death, dying, and the
afterlife. There's also a long, still-growing list of sci-fi movies and TV
shows about eternal life, including Self/Less, Transcendence, and Upload.

In 2014's rather prescient Transcendence, Johnny Depp is a scientist who is
fatally wounded and has his consciousness uploaded to an AI by a desperate
lover (and fellow scientist). As you might expect, things go awry: Depp's AI
consciousness grows too powerful and eventually leads to the destruction of all
technology.

    People know that none of these AIs are real and that the love and
compassion are, well, artificial. But like an artificial sweetener, it still
makes you feel the same way.

I don't think we're headed down that path (at least not yet), but I'm now
convinced that, while the idea of extending life through a digital simulacrum
sounds distasteful today, it may be de rigueur in the not-too-distant future.

The desire to reconnect with lost loved ones is, I'd argue, stronger than our
need to keep AI at bay. Even knowing that the entity on the other side of the
conversation is nothing more than a highly complex set of 1's and 0's won't
matter. If the AI can recreate the nuance, the mannerisms, vocal tics, and
virtual empathy of their lost loved one, that will be enough for some people.

Is it escapable?

We've already made our first timid steps into this space, connecting with AI
therapists and falling for AI partners. These people know that none of these
AIs are real and that the love and compassion are, well, artificial. But like
an artificial sweetener, it still makes you feel the same way.

Connecting with AI versions of deceased relatives will feel no different. And,
while deleting Facebook might help, trying to avoid it by deleting all social
media is probably a Quixotic effort. We've already filled the system with our
lives. They know us, and you can't scrub that training. What's more, AI has so
infiltrated society that they no longer need social media posts to learn who we
are, what we do, and how we act. AI's myriad and growing touchpoints across
society mean they have ample opportunity to learn the ins and outs of you.

And when it's your time, they will have an AI version of you at the ready,
whether or not anyone wants to talk to it.


https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/meta-could-make-social-media-
posting-immortal-and-we-should-all-cancel-our-facebook-accounts-right-now

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