Primary theme: Vulnerability and courage
Talk description
I want to talk about Death.
If there is one thing that has caused fear in every living creature from dawn of history to present day is death. Fear and pain are the basis for our self-preservation instincts but accepting our own mortality is so hard that we've created a whole set of "immortality systems" -national identities, art, religion, work and social structures- to delude ourselves (cf. Ernest Becker) and forget we're mortal.
However, as technology reshapes every corner of human relationships, the very concept of what it means to be dead is transformed too. The uncanny valley of afterlife will be soon paved by venture capital, with promises of online executors for your digital legacy, content creation to please your social audience in the hereafter and bots trained to mimic you for eternity (or at least until the startup's buyout/exit).
Are these eerie interactions bound to be creepy? Can they be tuned and provide therapeutic effects? Are our digital memories a faithful representation of ourselves? What kind of relationships could be built on top of these identities?
It's a difficult conversation for which I don't have all the answers, but I've many questions I'd love to share with you.
Learning objectives
- The current status of digital legacies and some possible evolution paths.
- The effects of software and digital identities on the concept of Death.
- The long-term implications of digital clones.
This http://blog.blprnt.com/blog/blprnt/all-the-names is the closest thing I can recall, but it's related to the memorial itself and not that much to the memories of the people.
Agreed. Open source code and formats are key to achieve longterm accessibility… but one could argue that even that could be not enough to save our knowledge and memories in some scenarios. What if for examples, some kind of sudden disaster destroy our short term ability to process digital information (lack of reliable electricity in big quantities, impossibility to run current manufacturing installations, etc.)?
Long Now Foundation has a project called "The Rosetta Project" (http://rosettaproject.org/) where you can find nearly 100,000 pages of material documenting over 2,500 languages and one very interesting part of it is "The Rosetta Disk" (http://rosettaproject.org/disk/concept/), a nickel disk etched with thousands of pages and readable with simple optical magnification, no hardware or software or even complex tool required. But this, is probably material for another, bigger, more complex discussion XD.
Good points. Two quick and possibly too simplistic ideas:
Thank you very much for your comments Marce!