Welcome to my genealogy blog. Genea-Musings features genealogy research tips and techniques, genealogy news items and commentary, genealogy humor, San Diego genealogy society news, family history research and some family history stories from the keyboard of Randy Seaver (of Chula Vista CA), who thinks that Genealogy Research Is really FUN!
Copyright (c) Randall J. Seaver, 2006-2024.
Welcome to Genealogy News Bytes, posted on Tuesday afternoon for the past week, where we try to highlight the most important genealogy and family history news items that came across our desktop since the last issue.
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The article rang a bell in my mind - I experimented in something similar two years ago with EmulateMe, which used a text interface and a video of my avatar to speak to the user. I was even one of the guinea pig subjects in the EmulateMe exhibit at RootsTech 2024. Some of my genealogy friends thought it was creepy and would never fly. EmulateMe disappeared thereafter, but it worked and would have improved over time. My avatar is still out there somewhere, I think.
The Forbes article doesn't provide any link to what is coming to genealogy -- only that there are companies like Delphi, HeyGen and Synthesia that are working the feature for other industries (sales, marketing, customer support).
There was speculation on Facebook that the article, written by Brian Will, signaled that Mr. Will would create or promote something similar for genealogy.
I went to Google Gemini 3 and asked it to delve deeper. Here is my prompt:
"A recent article in Forbes discussed a coming disruption in genealogy research caused by an AI tool. The AI tool is described as: 'With the advances in AI and voice cloning—video avatars that look just like us, and voice clones that sound exactly like us—the science fiction of five years ago is closer to reality than ever before. We now have the ability to capture a living person’s personality, knowledge, background and stories, and turn them into a fully interactive digital twin powered by AI. This is not a chatbot. This is not just a video. This AI twin has the ability to talk to you. It can answer questions about the person’s past. It can tell you stories in that person’s voice. It will look like, sound like and talk like you or your loved one.' What is this AI tool? Discuss the pros and cons of using this tool to tell stories about your ancestors."
Google Gemini 3 provided this response:
The AI tool described in the article is the "Interactive AI Digital Twin."
Specifically, the article ("Why The $3B Genealogy Market Is About To Be Disrupted By AI," published in April 2026) highlights a shift in the genealogy industry—moving from static records like birth certificates and census data to "living" digital legacies. While several companies like Delphi, HeyGen, and Synthesia provide the underlying technology for these avatars, the Forbes piece focuses on the emergence of this technology as a "Family Legacy" platform.
What is this tool?
It is a sophisticated combination of three core AI technologies:
Voice Cloning: Replicating a person’s exact vocal pitch, tone, and accent from a small sample of audio.
Video Avatars: Creating a photorealistic 3D or 2D visual representation that moves and emotes like the subject.
Conversational AI (LLMs): A "brain" trained on a specific person’s journals, emails, recordings, and history, allowing the twin to answer questions in that person’s specific speaking style.
Pros and Cons of Using AI Twins for Ancestry
Pros
Emotional Connection: Unlike a flat photograph or a silent document, a digital twin allows descendants to "experience" a relative’s personality. It bridges the emotional gap for younger generations who never met their ancestors.
Preservation of Oral History: It captures the "how" and "why" behind historical facts. While a census record shows a family moved in 1930, a digital twin can explain the struggle and emotion of that move in the person's own words.
Interactive Education: It turns genealogy from a passive hobby (searching databases) into an active conversation, making history more accessible and engaging for children and students.
Democratizing Legacies: Historically, only the elite had portraits or detailed biographies. This technology allows every family, regardless of status, to preserve their matriarchs and patriarchs for eternity.
Cons
The "Uncanny Valley" and Authenticity: There is a risk of the avatar feeling "creepy" or unnatural if the likeness isn't perfect. Furthermore, an AI twin is only as good as the data it's given; it can mimic a person’s voice but might lack the "soul" or subtle nuances of their actual character.
Data Privacy and Ethics: Creating a digital twin of a deceased relative raises questions of consent. Did the person want to be "reanimated"? There is also the risk of these models being hacked or the data being used by corporations for targeted advertising.
Potential for "Hallucination": AI can sometimes make up facts (hallucinate). An AI twin might confidently provide a "memory" that never actually happened, leading to the creation of "fake" family history that becomes accepted as truth over generations.
Grief Stagnation: Psychologists worry that interacting with a hyper-realistic version of a lost loved one might prevent healthy grieving, keeping family members stuck in a loop of digital interaction rather than moving toward acceptance.
Being curious, I asked Gemini:"Do you have any idea what company might be developing this AI Digital Twin?"
Gemini spilled the beans, saying:
Yes, the company primarily referenced in that context is Living Forever - AI.
Interestingly, the author of the Forbes article—Brian Will—is actually the Founder and CEO of that exact company. He wrote the piece as a Forbes Business Council Member to highlight the emerging "family legacy" market that his startup is targeting.
Here is a quick breakdown of what Living Forever - AI is doing in this space:
The Mission: Based in Atlanta, the startup focuses on creating interactive video AI digital twins designed specifically as a "pre-need" family legacy product. Instead of piecing together records after someone has passed, they capture the personalities, voices, and life stories of *living* people so future generations can have real-time video conversations with them firsthand.
The Technology Stack: They utilize Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) combined with advanced video avatar rendering and voice cloning. This allows the digital persona to draw from a secure database of the subject's actual memories, journals, and interviews, responding in their exact speaking style and tone.
The Market Position: While other well-funded AI avatar companies (like Delphi, HeyGen, and Synthesia) provide similar underlying tech, they have deliberately focused on corporate use cases like B2B sales training, marketing videos, and customer support. Living Forever AI is tailoring its platform entirely for genealogy, funeral services, and memory preservation.
Essentially, they are building the infrastructure to upgrade the family tree from static documents and faded photographs into a fully interactive, conversational experience.
I found the Living Forever - AI website easily -- here is the home page screen capture:
There is a Demo video available to demonstrate how it works once it's set up.
I can visualize using Living Forever - AI at a memorial service for a person, or with a private chat with a minister or priest, or with a knowledgeable genealogist, or at a family reunion.
I was number 499 to sign up for this service Then it told me it was a subscription service for $79 a month. There is a concierge service to help people work with it for a $1,000 fee plus the monthly subscription [Note: there was a one-time signup deal for $49 a month].
I love the concept -- My Story, My Voice, in a Video that my descendants, relatives and friends can access and converse with as long as they want. But there's a price attached to it.
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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendiumpage.
Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Note that all comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately.
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