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Jim Acosta interviews ‘made-up' AI avatar of Parkland victim Joaquin Oliver

Jim Acosta interviews ‘made-up' AI avatar of Parkland victim Joaquin Oliver

The Guardian17 hours ago
Jim Acosta, former chief White House correspondent for CNN, stirred controversy on Monday when he sat for a conversation with a reanimated version of a person who died more than seven years ago. His guest was an avatar of Joaquin Oliver, one of the 17 people killed in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school mass shooting in Parkland, Florida, in 2018.
The video shows Oliver, captured via a real photograph and animated with generative artificial intelligence, wearing a beanie with a solemn expression. Acosta asks the avatar: 'What happened to you?'
'I appreciate your curiosity,' Oliver answers in hurried monotone without inflection or pauses for punctuation. 'I was taken from this world too soon due to gun violence while at school. It's important to talk about these issues so we can create a safer future for everyone.' The avatar's narration is stilted and computerized. The movements of its face and mouth are jerky and unnatural, looking more like a dub-over than an actual person talking.
Oliver was 17 years old when he was shot and killed in the hallway of Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school. According to Since Parkland, a reporting project about the victims of the shooting, the teenager loved writing and came to school that day, Valentine's Day, with flowers for his girlfriend. He would have been 25 on Monday.
Acosta had teased the interview on social media saying it would be a 'show you don't want to miss' and a 'one of a kind interview'. The former correspondent now describes himself as an independent journalist and posts content on a Substack blog after parting ways with CNN in January.
The former CNN anchor quickly faced criticism online in response to the stunt. One of the many angry users on the social media platform Bluesky posted: 'There are living survivors of school shootings you could interview, and it would really be their words and thoughts instead of completely made-up.'
Acosta said in the video segment that Oliver's parents created the AI version of their son and his father, Manuel Oliver, invited him to be the first reporter to interview the avatar. Acosta also spoke to Manuel Oliver in the video, telling him: 'I really felt like I was speaking with Joaquin. It's just a beautiful thing.'
The victim's father said he understood this was an AI version of his son and that he can't bring him back, but it was a blessing to hear his voice again. He said he's looking forward to seeing what more AI can do.
Acosta's conversation is not the first time AI has been used to bring back the victims of Parkland. Last year, parents of several victims launched a robocalling campaign called The Shotline with the voices of six students and staff who were killed in the mass shooting. The idea was to use the AI voices to call members of Congress and demand action on gun reform. Oliver was one of the victims in that project too.
'I'm back today because my parents used AI to recreate my voice to call you,' Oliver's message said. 'How many calls will it take for you to care? How many dead voices will you hear before you finally listen?'
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The use of AI to speak with recreations of the dead is still a work in progress with imperfect movements and voices, one that comes steeped in ethical controversy. Critics say creating digitized computer avatars of real people and allowing them to stand in for the deceased opens the door for misinformation, deepfakes, fraud and scams, making it hard for people to distinguish between what is real or not.
Others have likewise used AI avatars to simulate the speech of victims of crimes. In May, an AI version of a man who was killed in a road rage incident in Arizona appeared in a court hearing. Lawyers played an AI video of the victim addressing his alleged killer in an impact statement. 'I believe in forgiveness, and a God who forgives. I always have and I still do,' the victim's avatar said.
The presiding judge responded favorably. 'I loved that AI, thank you for that. As angry as you are, as justifiably angry as the family is, I heard the forgiveness,' he said. 'I feel that that was genuine.'
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