In Russia, a deeply unsettling trend is emerging as families of soldiers killed in the Ukraine conflict turn to artificial intelligence to create digital replicas of their loved ones. Using voice cloning, deepfake avatars, and chatbot technology trained on personal messages, these grieving relatives are seeking comfort in simulated conversations with the deceased. But ethicists and psychologists are sounding alarms over the potential psychological and societal consequences.
The technology, often dubbed ‘griefbots,’ is not new. Startups in the West have offered similar services for years. However, the context of war amplifies the ethical stakes. In Russia, where the conflict has resulted in significant casualties, the demand for such digital resurrection has surged. Families upload photos, videos, and text messages to algorithms that generate a interactive persona, complete with the deceased’s voice and mannerisms. For some, it provides solace. ‘I can hear his voice again, tell him I love him,’ one widow told local media. But others warn this could delay the natural grieving process, trapping users in a state of perpetual denial.
The ethical storm centres on consent. The dead cannot agree to being digitally recreated, and the data used often includes private communications never intended for such purposes. Privacy advocates argue that even if families are comforted, the deceased’s digital legacy is being exploited without their explicit wishes. Furthermore, there are concerns about the long-term psychological impact. Dr. Elena Petrova, a Moscow-based psychologist, explains: ‘Grief requires acceptance. Interacting with a simulation can create a toxic attachment, preventing the brain from processing loss. It’s like an addiction to a ghost.’
Tech companies offering these services operate in a regulatory grey zone. Russia’s data protection laws are weak, and the Kremlin has shown interest in using AI for propaganda and social control. Some suspect that these griefbots could be manipulated to influence surviving family members, subtly promoting state narratives. The Russian Orthodox Church has condemned the practice, calling it ‘a diabolical mockery of the sacred.’ Yet, the services remain popular, with some companies reporting thousands of orders.
The broader implication is a black mirror scenario: as AI becomes more adept at mimicking humans, the line between life and digital afterlife blurs. For societies already grappling with trauma, the temptation to escape into a simulated past could hinder collective healing. In the West, similar services are often criticised but remain niche. In Russia, the combination of high death tolls, limited mental health support, and a state that may weaponise grief makes this a particularly dangerous experiment.
As this story develops, the question becomes: who controls the narrative of the dead? In a digital age, our loved ones may persist as data, but at what cost to our humanity? The Russian case is a warning to the world: we must establish ethical boundaries before grief becomes just another product for AI to optimise.








