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AI Firm Trots Out Digitally Resurrected Corpse of Stan Lee You Can Use to Create Mind-Numbing Slop

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Why This Matters

The use of AI to resurrect Stan Lee's voice and appearance raises significant ethical questions about consent, legacy, and the commercialization of deceased individuals. While it offers innovative ways for fans to engage with Lee's persona, it also risks exploiting his image without proper authorization or respect for his dignity. This development highlights the growing influence of AI in entertainment and the need for industry standards to address ethical concerns.

Key Takeaways

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Stan Lee, an icon of the comic books world, died in 2018.

But tell that to ElevenLabs, the AI voice synthesizing firm. On Wednesday, the company announced that it signed a new deal with the famed Marvel writer’s social media brand, Stan Lee Universe, allowing it to replicate his appearance and voice using AI — meaning that Lee will still be giving cameos beyond the grave, only this time without his say so.

“You know what they never tell you about legends? They outlive the page,” an AI Stan Lee said in a video released by ElevenLabs, per Variety.

“With great power comes great responsibility,” mimed the AI Lee in another video. “Excelsior!”

According to the announcement, users can pick Lee’s AI clone on the ElevenLabs “Iconic Marketplace” to narrate audiobooks and, in further mockery of his legacy, create AI generated comic panels that star him in it.

ElevenLabs will also launch a new “Stan Lee Book Club of the Month” series, in which the AI Lee will read a different book every month.

AI resurrections of dead public figures are always controversial and ethically fraught. But it feels especially egregious in Lee’s case, as he was allegedly the victim of horrific elder abuse in his final years, before dying at the age of 95. A lawsuit accused his handlers of trotting out the ailing writer to make money off his frequent public appearances, forcing him to write his signature for fans even when he appeared to forget where he was and how to spell his name. AI, arguably, is now further robbing him of his autonomy and dignity.

Stan Lee Universe doesn’t see it that way, with its board member and lawyer Chaz Rainey seeming to argue that this is all in keeping with Lee’s spirit.

“Stan always believed in meeting his fans where they were: in the pages of a comic, at a convention, or in a quick on-screen cameo,” Rainey said in a statement to Variety. “This partnership is a way of continuing that. Fans have always told us that when they read his comics, they hear the words in Stan’s voice, and now, thanks to ElevenLabs, we can make that a reality.”

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