Disaster AI company unveils avatar app that recreates deceased loved ones in interactive form - A new AI app lets families “talk” to the dead. People are calling it straight-up Black Mirror.

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In 2020, Kanye West gifted Kim Kardashian a hologram message of her late father, Rob Kardashian, for her birthday. The spectacle felt like a glimpse into a bizarre, dystopian future reserved for the rich and famous.

Now, the AI boom appears to be steering the wider world in the same direction.

A new AI company has sparked controversy online after launching an app that enables users to create interactive digital avatars of deceased family members.

The Los Angeles–based startup, 2Wai, went viral when co-founder Calum Worthy released a promotional video showing how the technology works.

The clip features a pregnant woman speaking to an AI recreation of her late mother through her phone.

It then jumps forward 10 months, showing the AI “grandma” reading a bedtime story to the baby.

Later, the child, now a young boy, talks casually with the avatar while walking home from school.

The video ends with the grown son telling the digital grandmother that she is about to become a great-grandmother.

“With 2Wai, three minutes can last forever,” the video states.

Worthy added that the company is “building a living archive of humanity” through its avatar-based social network. He also wrote, “What if the loved ones we’ve lost could be part of our future?”

What if the loved ones we've lost could be part of our future? pic.twitter.com/oFBGekVo1R
— Calum Worthy (@CalumWorthy) November 11, 2025

The app, now live on the Apple App Store, allows users to create what 2Wai calls a HoloAvatar. According to the company, these avatars “look and talk like you, and even share the same memories.”

Worthy urged users to “Try the 2wai beta on the App Store. Android coming soon.”

The concept immediately drew comparisons to Be Right Back, the unsettling 2013 episode of Black Mirror in which a grieving woman uses an AI replica of her dead partner. Social media users did not hold back.

Many called the video “nightmare fuel” and “demonic,” and some claimed the technology “be destroyed.”

Ethics debate intensifies​

Critics say the idea crosses emotional boundaries and risks replacing real grief with artificial comfort.

The video’s portrayal of a child forming lifelong bonds with an AI version of his grandmother triggered the strongest reactions.

Viewers questioned whether such technology could distort memory, attachment, and the process of loss.
The backlash also revived broader concerns about the trajectory of AI.

As digital avatars become more realistic and robotics advance quickly, experts warn that physical android versions of the deceased might soon be feasible.

That possibility raises deeper ethical questions about consent, identity, and the commercialization of grief.

Despite the criticism, the app continues to gain attention. Its social media promo has already crossed 4.1 million views on X, formerly Twitter.

Some users praised the idea of preserving voices and stories.

Many others argued that the technology feels too close to science fiction.

2Wai positions itself as a platform for legacy and storytelling. Its critics view it as a step into an unsettling future.

The debate around grief, memory, and AI is now growing louder, and the company’s rapid rise ensures that the conversation will not fade anytime soon.

https://interestingengineering.com/culture/2wai-digital-holoavatar-app (Archive)

 
On the plus side, we can now feed an AI pictures of George Washington and Hitler's speeches, then drop the resulting lolbot into public zoom meetings.
 
Imagine having your house outfitted with the technology like they used to bring Tupac back and that new $20,000 Neo Robot to bring back all your dead loved ones and miscarried and aborted babies..
On the plus side, we can now feed an AI pictures of George Washington and Hitler's speeches, then drop the resulting lolbot into public zoom meetings.
Combine these two and you can have real life lolbots invading boardroom meetings. The future is now!
 
The best take on this is by Zelda Williams (Robin's daughter). She gets AI vids of her dad all the time and she's against it.

Nietzsche was wrong. Not only is god dead, Jesus and The Holy Spirit are to If this shit goes unpunished.
If they're dead we can animate them to say this is right.
 
Everyone in the company should be thrown into the sun.
 
This would be a wonderful way to talk to deceased relatives who you never really got to know IRL. My uncle Adolf died all too young in a tragic fire and I never got to meet him. I can already imagine him reading his favorite book to me, or giving me advice on current events. Really looking forward to this.
 
Not scummier than the psychic industry.
Scummier:
  • a psychic is only after your money and wants you to feel good and keep coming, the AI is a cheap tool of the globohomo and can have other purposes
  • psychic scams do not scale well, AI scams do
    • limited influence of a single psychic (has to personally work with each mark, leaving less time for scamming others)
    • limited influence on a single mark (the contact between the mark and the psychic is limited by space/time/money)
  • psychic activity is conspicuous and can be stopped by attentive relatives, an AI scam victim is "on his phone" in private
 

Ethics debate intensifies​

Debate? There is no debate. There isn't even a retarded spiritual or mystical justification about a spirit being called from beyond or whatever. This is an overgrown auto-complete being paraded around with the faces of dead people. You are not getting closure with your mother, you are getting fed probabilistic mush from some skinwalking golem.

Worthy added that the company is “building a living archive of humanity” through its avatar-based social network. He also wrote, “What if the loved ones we’ve lost could be part of our future?”
Yes thank you, I've always wanted to experience SOMA in real life! Now I can die knowing that my name and personality will be scraped, laundered, and puppeteer-ed by some algorithm, dancing in a macabre simulacra of social media, endlessly simulating and re-simulating conversations with other corpse-accounts. A distant descendant will stop by, asking questions about my life only to get some generic statement about the time period. "I lived during 2020's! During my life I saw WORDS WORDS WORDS." One day someone will poison the model's dataset and begin a mass scam campaign, my vacant persona regurgitating compromised links to any passersby. Eventually the project will be forgotten and left to rot in a server somewhere, chewing through power and funds because no one can be bothered to pull the plug or revive the system. The bills will run dry and the "living archive of humanity" will cease, my hijacked-identity halfway through generating some witty retort to another zombie-user. A true second-death, my legacy is now proprietary code thrown into a landfill because the only constant in life is that nothing lasts forever.

Necromancers need to be burned at the stake or stoned to death, no exceptions.
 
I couldn't finish that fucking video in the OP. Some company out there is preying on peoples' sentimental feelings for their loved ones to harvest their data and it's fucking disgusting.

Another thing that really disturbs me is how technology has changed the way we cognitively function. Growing up, I knew all my friends' and family's phone numbers and now I don't have to because my phone stores all that shit. There are kids growing up who don't know how to build connections with their peers because all that shit's online. You have people who don't date because they have their perfect AI boyfriend/girlfriend who will tell them everything they want to hear. And now we got this fucking shit where people are going to how the circle of life works. It sucks losing a loved one. You look at the world and ask it how it can keep turning because that person's gone only to have the world look back at you to say "I've seen billions of people come and go. You and those you care about will be among them." And part of growing up is coming to terms with that. You move ahead, build your own future, and reflect one what kind of legacy you'll leave behind.

Fuck these people. AI's good for a lot of things, this isn't one of them.
 
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Scummier:
  • a psychic is only after your money and wants you to feel good and keep coming, the AI is a cheap tool of the globohomo and can have other purposes
  • psychic scams do not scale well, AI scams do
    • limited influence of a single psychic (has to personally work with each mark, leaving less time for scamming others)
    • limited influence on a single mark (the contact between the mark and the psychic is limited by space/time/money)
  • psychic activity is conspicuous and can be stopped by attentive relatives, an AI scam victim is "on his phone" in private
Psychics have absolutely destroyed families economically and emotionally, especially those that are good at manipulations. Selling a subscription model won't bankrupt anyone.
 
"grok, put my mom's face on Amy Rose's body and set her personality to ERP mode. I'm getting lucky tonight!" - Chris-chan 2028
 
There are no pictures of me as an adult on the internet, and I post mostly racist jokes and old man whining on anonymous forums. Go ahead and recreate me based on that, It might be fun.
 
I like how the ad uses the actress throughout the entire thing and never demonstrates the actual app at work to mislead people, as if the ai app will somehow have all your grandma's memories and know the songs she used to sing and the stories she used to tell you as a child decades ago. I'm willing to bet money that it will be just as shitty and unconvincing as every current "ai friend" app that already exist. It will just be character ai, with your dead loved one as the character.
 
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