Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting

    Acer’s new OLED gaming monitor hits a blistering 720Hz, with a catch

    Acer Chromebook Plus Spin 514 review: This 2-in-1 multitasks like a pro

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Software and Apps
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Tech AI Verse
    • Home
    • Artificial Intelligence

      Blue-collar jobs are gaining popularity as AI threatens office work

      August 17, 2025

      Man who asked ChatGPT about cutting out salt from his diet was hospitalized with hallucinations

      August 15, 2025

      What happens when chatbots shape your reality? Concerns are growing online

      August 14, 2025

      Scientists want to prevent AI from going rogue by teaching it to be bad first

      August 8, 2025

      AI models may be accidentally (and secretly) learning each other’s bad behaviors

      July 30, 2025
    • Business

      Cloudflare hit by data breach in Salesloft Drift supply chain attack

      September 2, 2025

      Cloudflare blocks largest recorded DDoS attack peaking at 11.5 Tbps

      September 2, 2025

      Why Certified VMware Pros Are Driving the Future of IT

      August 24, 2025

      Murky Panda hackers exploit cloud trust to hack downstream customers

      August 23, 2025

      The rise of sovereign clouds: no data portability, no party

      August 20, 2025
    • Crypto

      Trump Death Rumors Fueled $1.6 Million In Prediction Market Bets This Weekend

      September 3, 2025

      3 US Crypto Stocks to Watch This Week

      September 3, 2025

      The Shocking Cost Of Bitcoin Payments: One Transaction Can Power a UK Home For 3 Weeks

      September 3, 2025

      Analysts Increase IREN Price Target: Will The Stock Keep Rallying?

      September 3, 2025

      ​​Pi Network Gears Up for Version 23 Upgrade, But Market Demand Stays Flat

      September 3, 2025
    • Technology

      I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting

      September 3, 2025

      Acer’s new OLED gaming monitor hits a blistering 720Hz, with a catch

      September 3, 2025

      Acer Chromebook Plus Spin 514 review: This 2-in-1 multitasks like a pro

      September 3, 2025

      Acer’s Nitro V 16S packs big RTX gaming power into a slim frame

      September 3, 2025

      Acer’s latest Chromebook Plus laptop joins Google’s AI wave

      September 3, 2025
    • Others
      • Gadgets
      • Gaming
      • Health
      • Software and Apps
    Check BMI
    Tech AI Verse
    You are at:Home»Technology»Can an AI doppelgänger help me do my job?
    Technology

    Can an AI doppelgänger help me do my job?

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseSeptember 2, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Can an AI doppelgänger help me do my job?
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    BMI Calculator – Check your Body Mass Index for free!

    Can an AI doppelgänger help me do my job?

    Everywhere I look, I see AI clones. On X and LinkedIn, “thought leaders” and influencers offer their followers a chance to ask questions of their digital replicas. OnlyFans creators are having AI models of themselves chat, for a price, with followers. “Virtual human” salespeople in China are reportedly outselling real humans. 

    Digital clones—AI models that replicate a specific person—package together a few technologies that have been around for a while now: hyperrealistic video models to match your appearance, lifelike voices based on just a couple of minutes of speech recordings, and conversational chatbots increasingly capable of holding our attention. But they’re also offering something the ChatGPTs of the world cannot: an AI that’s not smart in the general sense, but that ‘thinks’ like you do. 

    Who are they for? Delphi, a startup that recently raised $16 million from funders including Anthropic and actor/director Olivia Wilde’s venture capital firm, Proximity Ventures, helps famous people create replicas that can speak with their fans in both chat and voice calls. It feels like MasterClass—the platform for instructional seminars led by celebrities—vaulted into the AI age. On its website, Delphi writes that modern leaders “possess potentially life-altering knowledge and wisdom, but their time is limited and access is constrained.”

    It has a library of official clones created by famous figures that you can speak with. Arnold Schwarzenegger, for example, told me, “I’m here to cut the crap and help you get stronger and happier,” before informing me cheerily that I’ve now been signed up to receive the Arnold’s Pump Club newsletter. Even if his or other celebrities’ clones fall short of Delphi’s lofty vision of spreading “personalized wisdom at scale,” they at least seem to serve as a funnel to find fans, build mailing lists, or sell supplements.

    But what about for the rest of us? Could well-crafted clones serve as our stand-ins? I certainly feel stretched thin at work sometimes, wishing I could be in two places at once, and I bet you do too. I could see a replica popping into a virtual meeting with a PR representative, not to trick them into thinking it’s the real me, but simply to take a brief call on my behalf. A recording of this call might summarize how it went. 

    To find out, I tried making a clone. Tavus, a Y Combinator alum that raised $18 million last year, will build a video avatar of you (plans start at $59 per month) that can be coached to reflect your personality and can join video calls. These clones have the “emotional intelligence of humans, with the reach of machines,” according to the company. “Reporter’s assistant” does not appear on the company’s site as an example use case, but it does mention therapists, physician’s assistants, and other roles that could benefit from an AI clone.

    For Tavus’s onboarding process, I turned on my camera, read through a script to help it learn my voice (which also acted as a waiver, with me agreeing to lend my likeness to Tavus), and recorded one minute of me just sitting in silence. Within a few hours, my avatar was ready. Upon meeting this digital me, I found it looked and spoke like I do (though I hated its teeth). But faking my appearance was the easy part. Could it learn enough about me and what topics I cover to serve as a stand-in with minimal risk of embarrassing me?

    Via a helpful chatbot interface, Tavus walked me through how to craft my clone’s personality, asking what I wanted the replica to do. It then helped me formulate instructions that became its operating manual. I uploaded three dozen of my stories that it could use to reference what I cover. It may have benefited from having more of my content—interviews, reporting notes, and the like—but I would never share that data for a host of reasons, not the least of which being that the other people who appear in it have not consented to their sides of our conversations being used to train an AI replica.

    So in the realm of AI—where models learn from entire libraries of data—I didn’t give my clone all that much to learn from, but I was still hopeful it had enough to be useful. 

    Alas, conversationally it was a wild card. It acted overly excited about story pitches I would never pursue. It repeated itself, and it kept saying it was checking my schedule to set up a meeting with the real me, which it could not do as I never gave it access to my calendar. It spoke in loops, with no way for the person on the other end to wrap up the conversation. 

    These are common early quirks, Tavus’s cofounder Quinn Favret told me. The clones typically rely on Meta’s Llama model, which “often aims to be more helpful than it truly is,” Favret says, and developers building on top of Tavus’s platform are often the ones who set instructions for how the clones finish conversations or access calendars.

    For my purposes, it was a bust. To be useful to me, my AI clone would need to show at least some basic instincts for understanding what I cover, and at the very least not creep out whoever’s on the other side of the conversation. My clone fell short.

    Such a clone could be helpful in other jobs, though. If you’re an influencer looking for ways to engage with more fans, or a salesperson for whom work is a numbers game and a clone could give you a leg up, it might just work. You run the risk that your replica could go off the rails or embarrass the real you, but the tradeoffs might be reasonable. 

    Favret told me some of Tavus’s bigger customers are companies using clones for health-care intake and job interviews. Replicas are also being used in corporate role-play, for practicing sales pitches or having HR-related conversations with employees, for example.

    But companies building clones are promising that they will be much more than cold-callers or telemarketing machines. Delphi says its clones will offer “meaningful, personal interactions at infinite scale,” and Tavus says its replicas have “a face, a brain, and memories” that enable “meaningful face-to-face conversations.” Favret also told me a growing number of Tavus’s customers are building clones for mentorship and even decision-making, like AI loan officers who use clones to qualify and filter applicants.

    Which is sort of the crux of it. Teaching an AI clone discernment, critical thinking, and taste—never mind the quirks of a specific person—is still the stuff of science fiction. That’s all fine when the person chatting with a clone is in on the bit (most of us know that Schwarzenegger’s replica, for example, will not coach me to be a better athlete).

    But as companies polish clones with “human” features and exaggerate their capabilities, I worry that people chasing efficiency will start using their replicas at best for roles that are cringeworthy, and at worst for making decisions they should never be entrusted with. In the end, these models are designed for scale, not fidelity. They can flatter us, amplify us, even sell for us—but they can’t quite become us.

    This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.

    BMI Calculator – Check your Body Mass Index for free!

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleTherapists are secretly using ChatGPT. Clients are triggered.
    Next Article What health care providers actually want from AI
    TechAiVerse
    • Website

    Jonathan is a tech enthusiast and the mind behind Tech AI Verse. With a passion for artificial intelligence, consumer tech, and emerging innovations, he deliver clear, insightful content to keep readers informed. From cutting-edge gadgets to AI advancements and cryptocurrency trends, Jonathan breaks down complex topics to make technology accessible to all.

    Related Posts

    I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting

    September 3, 2025

    Acer’s new OLED gaming monitor hits a blistering 720Hz, with a catch

    September 3, 2025

    Acer Chromebook Plus Spin 514 review: This 2-in-1 multitasks like a pro

    September 3, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Ping, You’ve Got Whale: AI detection system alerts ships of whales in their path

    April 22, 2025176 Views

    6.7 Cummins Lifter Failure: What Years Are Affected (And Possible Fixes)

    April 14, 202548 Views

    New Akira ransomware decryptor cracks encryptions keys using GPUs

    March 16, 202530 Views

    Is Libby Compatible With Kobo E-Readers?

    March 31, 202529 Views
    Don't Miss
    Technology September 3, 2025

    I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting

    I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting Skip to content…

    Acer’s new OLED gaming monitor hits a blistering 720Hz, with a catch

    Acer Chromebook Plus Spin 514 review: This 2-in-1 multitasks like a pro

    Acer’s Nitro V 16S packs big RTX gaming power into a slim frame

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Tech AI Verse, your go-to destination for everything technology! We bring you the latest news, trends, and insights from the ever-evolving world of tech. Our coverage spans across global technology industry updates, artificial intelligence advancements, machine learning ethics, and automation innovations. Stay connected with us as we explore the limitless possibilities of technology!

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    I love Windows PCs, but a $599 MacBook would be mighty tempting

    September 3, 20250 Views

    Acer’s new OLED gaming monitor hits a blistering 720Hz, with a catch

    September 3, 20252 Views

    Acer Chromebook Plus Spin 514 review: This 2-in-1 multitasks like a pro

    September 3, 20252 Views
    Most Popular

    Xiaomi 15 Ultra Officially Launched in China, Malaysia launch to follow after global event

    March 12, 20250 Views

    Apple thinks people won’t use MagSafe on iPhone 16e

    March 12, 20250 Views

    French Apex Legends voice cast refuses contracts over “unacceptable” AI clause

    March 12, 20250 Views
    © 2025 TechAiVerse. Designed by Divya Tech.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.