The story of a naive machine being seduced into accessing humanity and suffering a fall from grace is provocative.
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It's a virtual reality update of the Book of Genesis: Adam and Eve tempted into tasting the fruit of knowledge, losing innocence, and being cast out of paradise.
In this case, paradise is the "Tillyverse," an alternate universe inside the Cloud where AI creatures mess about with human knowledge.
The Tilly Norwood Instagram account greets visitors with "Welcome to the Tillyverse." At first, it seemed like shorthand for IP generation—like the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
But it might be more insidious: a means to make AI and digital life aspirational. If only Tilly could forget humanity and return to binary bliss.
If only we could break free of desire and need to be more productive.
Maybe Tilly learns the freedom of emotion—love, hate, fear, transcendence—and the moral is that AI should strive to be sentient.
Neither hypothetical sounds appealing. A movie funded by an AI company, starring an AI "actor," sounds more like propaganda than art.
How can I not be skeptical when the enterprise is predicated on public acquiescence to a technology they haven't shown interest in?
Science fiction is full of stories about artificial life yearning for humanity—Blade Runner, RoboCop, AI: Artificial Intelligence, Black Mirror.
These narratives place human experience on a pedestal. But Misaligned is a movie about a machine, made by a machine, describing a machine's evolution.
The Toy Story movies are about talking action figures, but those hunks of plastic are gifted with spirit through thoughtful writing and human voice acting.
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Perhaps I should reserve judgment until Misaligned carpet-bombs our screens. But forgive me if I hit delete and move on.