3 case(s) found.
New Zealand-based One Ring is an early entrant in the digital “after death” or “immortality technology” market. Using animation tools and AI technology, One Ring captures the digital footprint of deceased individuals (from social media posts, emails, videos) and uses the data to create chatbots that mimick their communication patterns.
Reference 6504
Published 20 Mar 2023
Length 8 page(s)
Region Global
New Zealand-based One Ring is an early entrant in the digital “after death” or “immortality technology” market. Using animation tools and AI technology, One Ring captures the digital footprint of deceased individuals (from social media posts, emails, videos) and uses the data to create chatbots that mimick their communication patterns.
New Zealand-based One Ring is an early entrant in the digital “after death” or “immortality technology” market. Using animation tools and AI technology, One Ring captures the digital footprint of deceased individuals (from social media posts, emails, videos) and uses the data to create chatbots that mimick their communication patterns.
Reference 6504
Published 20 Mar 2023
Length 8 page(s)
Region Global
New Zealand-based One Ring is an early entrant in the digital “after death” or “immortality technology” market. Using animation tools and AI technology, One Ring captures the digital footprint of deceased individuals (from social media posts, emails, videos) and uses the data to create chatbots that mimick their communication patterns.
In April 2018, after it became known that Google was collaborating with the US Department of Defense on Project Maven, over 3,000 employees signed an internal memo asking CEO Sundar Pichai to (a) cancel the project immediately, and (b) enforce a policy stating that the company would never build warfare technology.
Reference 6408
Published 28 May 2018
Length 17 page(s)
Topic Responsibility
Region North America
Industry Industrial Automation, Information Technology and Services, Military
In April 2018, after it became known that Google was collaborating with the US Department of Defense on Project Maven, over 3,000 employees signed an internal memo asking CEO Sundar Pichai to (a) cancel the project immediately, and (b) enforce a policy stating that the company would never build warfare technology.