Digital necrophilia Artificial intelligence can learn from files with works of a particular artist, and then continue to create in his style, even if the person has already died. Add to this speech generation technology that can reproduce a person's voice with all its individual shades and intonations, and you have immortal avatars for everyone. Reported by Noema Mag (https://bit.ly/3wHMx4U). In July, the voice of the famous chef, traveler and documentary filmmaker Anthony Bourdin was raised from the dead. In a film about this man's life, he reads aloud a letter to a friend: "My life has turned to shit. You, like me, are a successful person. Are you happy?" However, Bourdin never spoke these words, he only wrote them. His voice was generated by artificial intelligence. Most viewers perceived this dialogue as an insult against the memory of Bourdain. This is not the first time technology has been used to resurrect dead celebrities: the Coachella Festival featured a hologram of Tupac Shakur, a 3D animated Fred Astaire danced in a Dirt Devil commercial, and Peter Cushing appeared in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. But the synthesis of realistic copies of voices and images of people using neural networks is a whole new level. Bringing dead performers back to life with synthetic AI voice models fulfills the dream of bringing the dead back to life. But the use of voice deepfakes is a controversial practice from an ethical standpoint. So, Bourdin's voice clone was criticized on the assumption that he himself might not like it. As Helen Rosner writes in the New Yorker magazine (https://bit.ly/3qDlzdE), authenticity is an integral part of Bourdin's image. In Plantain, Neville does not inform the audience that Bourdain never actually spoke these words, so the director simply deceived the audience. By aligning their legacy with their own vocal identity, creative style and possible new contexts generated by AI, artists will be able to create right from the grave. But first, they will need to determine the conditions of their posthumous creative activity, deciding how, when and by whom their music archive can be used to train algorithms. According to researcher Keith Crawford, the creators of AI systems are guided by the idea that everything around is data that can be freely used. According to this view, individual objects, be they mugshots or musical fragments, are devoid of personal, social and political significance. Nothing should interfere with feeding them to neural networks in order to make money on this. Intellectual property and copyright laws have not kept pace with the development of new technologies, and not all judicial authorities recognize posthumous rights. Nevertheless, artists and their heirs, if taken care of in advance, will be able to prevent their voice from becoming a commodity and make their own decisions about their posthumous work.