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Show HN: Clone someone and talk to them like in real life (gptclone.ai)
27 points by zhuofengli 968 days ago
12 comments

Why does the demo require an account, isn't the whole point it the demo to convince people to register?

I'm not going to give away my email address without knowing more than "clone someone with ChatGPT" on a website with no more information than four names and a title.

I'm guessing this is another character.ai then?

it's more like a voice chat version of character.ai

requiring an account makes it easier to store user chat history so that in future the AI would have the context

but maybe you're right, allowing guest usage could improve conversions

Also 6th point of HN guidelines https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html
Thanks, but no thanks.

To quote Nietzsche simply out of context, "many too many are already born", so no need to copy 'n' paste them.

But I would like to study the data of those that talk to the copies not just for fun.

So philosophical.
I think the problem I have with this is the ethical and moral side of things because people can form unhealthy relationships with things that aren’t real. It’s not a real person and people already struggle with making meaningful connections.
These Black Mirror episodes come to mind:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Be_Right_Back A woman gets a clone of her deceased husband

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Is_Awful A woman gets replaced by another woman

So, I have a legitimate question about this sort of thing:

My grandparents are getting older, and historically their health hasn't been the greatest.

I get to visit them maybe once or twice a year. I might see them less than 10 times again in my lifetime.

Given current technology, is it not feasible for me to digitally preserve their personality and experiences somehow?

My thought was that I could:

- Use an iPhone camera to take 3D scan of their bodies in a T-Pose with LIDAR

- Record several hours of them talking to me

- Ask them to give me copies of any sort of written correspondence or journals they have ever written, as well as maybe start keeping a daily diary (either written or vocal)

Theoretically with this data, wouldn't I be able to generate a 3D, VR version of them that is sort of somewhat similar?

If not, what else do I need/should I do to improve accuracy?

Thanks HN.

> I get to visit them maybe once or twice a year. I might see them less than 10 times again in my lifetime.

If you can, it's probably better to go spend time with them than trying to clone them using technology.

I've worked remotely for a month from my parents' house earlier this year, and we all really enjoyed it since we could spend time together after work. Hopefully you have that opportunity too.

I don't recall the guy's name. I don't even know what to google to find a link for you, but several years ago I came across an article of a man who did something similar to what you are talking about but as a Chat Bot (it was well before ChatGPT was public).

He did a large number of interviews with his dying father over the course of a year. Then he transposed all the questions and answer from those interviews into a database (i think). And built a Chat bot that used natural language to 'talk' with him after his father passed away to preserve his father in a virtual way. THe bot could answer random questions (not the interview questions) and form answers in the 'voice' and 'tone' of his dad bases on the hundreds or thousands of questions he'd asked in those interviews. It could create new answers based on all that data as if the father was texting his son.

I know that the article (or series of articles) I read about this was pretty detailed in how the man went about this. I'm sorry I can't recall where I read this.

I am sure there is a way to do something much more in depth now that ChatGPT is as robust as it is.

Could it be this one? Can you please check and see if it rings a bell?

https://www.wired.com/story/a-sons-race-to-give-his-dying-fa...

Others have said it here, but I read this and thought, "Why not just prioritize spending time with them now, while they're still alive?"

I'm not convinced that the human condition would be improved by simulation of the deceased. I could be convinced that would be a project with unexpected consequences that aren't so good.

Have you asked your grandparents if they want to be preserved in this way?
This come off so… un-human. Like a machine trying to preserve a human rather than a human trying to maximize real experiences with them.
Nah, you just have a bias along the lines of "if it weren't done before, it is unhuman".
Firefox Android, I get an option to share my email address and no information about what this is or who would be using that information.

No thanks.

It looks like a standard account creation flow.

If you chose the email option instead of “sign in with Google”, the server will probably use that email address to send you a login link. This is pretty standard for any web service, even blogs, where users can create accounts.

I think the comment means “who ends up with my email address and why” not “why am I being asked fire on email address to create an account”.

Given that - presumably - you are going to be asked for content such as voice recordings to create the clone this is a valid concern.

Sure, the login and sign up process is standard. But it's not typical to provide no information as to who is operating the site, or what the site does. Do those things appear in your browser?

I only see a title, a sign up link, and some celebrity photos.

Hi there - thanks for the feedback. This is just an MVP and the UX might be confusing.

It's a site where you can create voice clones of someone and talk to them.

You can tap on the celebrities to chat with them as a test

Standard would include “sign in with Apple” - which at least provides some kind of anonymity.
"Firebase: Exceeded daily quota for email sign-in. (auth/quota-exceeded)"

Been looking for a app that allows me to clone a face based on the pictures I have and able to create pictures with that person in it.

It should have been fixed, can you try again?

if you're looking to create photos of someone, you can take a look at: https://suitup.ai

This gets more interesting if you clone Einstein or Archimedes etc. It could be sort of educational.
Star Trek holodeck comes to mind, "computer create the facsimile of X-scientist, enrich the persona with his/her journals and blah blah blah" and then you get to interact with the persona.
Awesome. I can imagine people who lost their loved ones will find this very helpful.
Isn't this what Replika was originally supposed to be?
Damn, I hope nobody ever clones me like that.
howabout a video?