- Reels, Thrills, and Bills
- Posts
- Your Personal Avatar Awaits
Your Personal Avatar Awaits
AI can create your own digital twin. Should we be worried?

Digital Avatar | Flux
AI technology can now replicate an individual's personality through a two-hour interview, creating simulation agents that mirror human behaviors and values with 85% accuracy, potentially transforming social science research and allowing all of us to have our own digital twin.
Problem: Traditional research methods in social sciences are often limited by cost, feasibility, and ethical constraints when studying human behavior at a large scale or in controlled conditions.
Solution: By developing AI simulation agents that accurately represent human personalities, researchers can conduct extensive, ethical, and less costly experiments in simulated environments, exploring complex social dynamics and policy impacts without real human involvement.
Reels

More Chaos | Flux
Donald Trump, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and other luminaries walk into a music video and chaos ensues. The Dor Brothers continue their reign of using AI to push out creative music videos that are hard to imagine existing before our current age of AI.
In "Aire, Just Breathe," a dystopian sci-fi film set in 2147, a lone scientist, Tania, along with her AI companion Vida, attempts to revive humanity post a devastating chemical war, but their isolated survival is challenged by the arrival of a mysterious adventurer, Azarias. Despite its visually striking setting, the film struggles with familiar themes, culminating in a predictable ending, though it effectively comments on technology's role in environmental crises.
Hollywood continues cautiously exploring generative AI due to concerns over costs, copyright, and technology maturity, yet the push for cost reduction and competitive pressures from social media and streaming platforms are driving interest.
Deloitte predicts a slow integration with only a small percentage of budgets allocated to AI tools in the near future, focusing on operational efficiencies rather than production.