A
technology company says it's working on a project which would allow a human's
consciousness to be transferred to an artificial body after their death.
In what sounds like a plot from a science fiction blockbuster, tech company Humai are working on human resurrection through artificial intelligence.
In what sounds like a plot from a science fiction blockbuster, tech company Humai are working on human resurrection through artificial intelligence.
They're hopeful that the technology - bionics, nanotechnology and artificial
intelligence - will be ready in just three decades.
Creating an imprint of people to remain after they go , Humai is using artificial intelligence and nanotechnology to store data of conversational styles, behavioral patterns, thought processes and information about how bodies function.
Creating an imprint of people to remain after they go , Humai is using artificial intelligence and nanotechnology to store data of conversational styles, behavioral patterns, thought processes and information about how bodies function.
This
data will be coded into multiple sensor technologies, which will be built into
an artificial body with the brain of a deceased human.
The science as they explain it means using cloning technology, they will be
able to restore the brain as it matures.
Their website explains:
"Humai
is an AI company with a mission to reinvent the afterlife. We want to bring you
back to life after you die."
Humai,
based in Los Angeles, is funded entirely by CEO and founder Josh Bocanegra.
Bocanegra told Australian Popular Science that the brain of the deceased will be frozen using cryonics technology so that when the technology is fully developed they can implant the brain into an artificial body.
Bocanegra told Australian Popular Science that the brain of the deceased will be frozen using cryonics technology so that when the technology is fully developed they can implant the brain into an artificial body.
"The
artificial body functions will be controlled with your thoughts by measuring
brain waves.
"As
the brain ages we'll use nanotechnology to repair and improve cells," he
adds, saying that cloning technology is going to help, and: "We believe we
can resurrect the first human within 30 years."
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