Emotional Well-Being in Teens: Su Yeong Kim Explains Why Support Outweighs Pressure to Achieve Academic Success
Su Yeong Kim·6 min
Not wanting to be left behind, actors have begun to take advantage of the technology to preserve their images and themselves for future projects. Elaborate sets of LED lighting and recording devices store up to 10 terabytes of data at the cost of about $1M. Any actor with the money and the sense of what the future will bring is setting up appointments now. One of the active creators providing the service is Digital Domain, the company that produced the Tupac hologram for Coachella. They admit they’ve scanned about 60 clients to date. The clients shall go nameless by agreement.
Entertainers and actors will need special clauses written into their contracts that will include royalties beyond their death. Typically, the fees would be limited to specified performances while they were alive. The five-lines-or-more rule applies here. But we can see new opportunities for optimizing income without limiting it to creations while they were alive.
Just as Amy Winehouse, Roy Orbison and Buddy Holly “tour” together in a holographic presentation after their deaths, actors could be included in future films after they had died. The possibilities will present attorneys and agents many thoughtful hours as they draft new forms of contractual agreements. Who owns the rights to all images of an entertainer in all productions forever? Wills will have to be re-written to provide for royalties paid after the estates’ executors and beneficiaries are gone. How many generations can beneficiary rights exist?
Never saying good-bye to our loved ones
Every living human and our pets, too, can remain available to us in perpetuity via holograms. One TV station in the UK has begun providing a three-part series entitled “Ghost” where terminally ill patients will leave messages for their loved ones.
The producers have stated, “These deeply personal missives will then be delivered post mortem in vivid three-dimensional holographic form, allowing them to appear as if from beyond the grave to comfort the loved ones they have left behind.” The question of “comfort” remains open to speculation and whether or not this is helpful in the grieving process is questionable, as well.
Many people wish they had an opportunity to talk to their dead loved ones to resolve painful issues. A need to pour out regrets and make amends to an all-forgiving hologram might be therapeutic, but would it be possible? Accuracy of facial recognition even cataloging over 30K infrared dots could be of questionable use.
How limited would the holograms be in their renderings? Might it be possible to produce varied environments suited to the departed person and shift as you wish? Could an activity be planned? Going fishing with dad would be a lot more satisfying than sitting and talking about it. Here, AI and VR begin to become mixed in new milieus.
Would the AI program always be so understanding and forgiving? Who would write code that had such flexibility of “intellect” regarding reading the emotional needs of the individual? How about ownership of the hologram? If we bought it would we own it or, as a Kindle book, would we be “renting” it? Of course, it would be unimaginable to “rent” your dearly departed grandma even though you would have paid for her to be created. Not like something from Microsoft or Adobe.
Think tank time approaches with the improvements in AI and holograms. Would the AI be empathic? What about ethics? Would AI report a crime that was committed? Can coders ensure that the programs follow the rule of law?
If deep learning is involved, could the AI suggest revenge or retribution as the dead person might have wanted? What about software upgrades to keep the holograms compatible with the hardware? All scenarios must be considered or the problems mount.
Perpetual pets, too
Regarding pets, how do you take your trusty Fido hologram for a walk? Another area to be developed is tactile AI which could be incorporated is virtual leashes. Natural barks pulls, and yelps can be a part of the mix, too. No more worries about kitty litter trays, either. Virtual Tabby will never need to go to the pan unless you buy an accessory program that includes that feature.
And no allergies from whatever pet you wish. You could have whatever type of pet you wanted from a Siberian tiger to a “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” cartoon. Jimmy Stewart had “Harvey” who was completely invisible to others, but we would want our hologram to be visible to all.
The sticking point is getting all that video into a library to create these pets. But present-day animals’ actions could be digitized onto existing libraries of frameworks for your new pets, couldn’t they? CGI to the rescue.
The new cachet of disposable income would be how expensive your holographic pet might be and what it was able to do. Fantasy will be set free in this new world of possibilities.Instantly repurpose any DDI article into a professionally produced short-form video.
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