The UK government has issued a stark warning about a disturbing new trend: Russian families are using artificial intelligence to create lifelike digital avatars of soldiers killed in the Ukraine war, a practice officials are calling 'desecration technology' that blurs the line between remembrance and exploitation.
The phenomenon, which has spread rapidly on Russian social media platforms, involves feeding photos, videos, and voice recordings of deceased soldiers into generative AI models. The results are eerily realistic chatbots and video simulations that can interact with grieving families, offering comfort or even reliving memories. But critics argue this is a profound ethical violation, reducing human tragedy to a digital puppet show.
'The dead cannot consent, and their data is being weaponised for propaganda,' said Dr. Elena Volkov, a digital ethics researcher at the University of Oxford. 'This is not healing; it’s a digital haunting.'
The UK Foreign Office has condemned the practice, with a spokesperson stating: 'This grotesque misuse of technology desecrates the memory of fallen soldiers and exploits the grief of their loved ones. We are working with allies to monitor and counter such abuses.'
At the heart of the issue is a clash between cultural norms and technological capability. In Russian society, where death is often ritualised and the state glorifies military sacrifice, AI resurrection offers a perverse form of continued connection. But Western experts see it as a canary in the coal mine for how AI could be weaponised to manipulate memory and historical truth.
The technology itself is not new: startups like Replika and HereAfter have offered 'digital immortality' for years, allowing users to create conversational AI ghosts of themselves. But the context of war and propaganda adds a toxic layer. 'This is psychological warfare turned inward,' said Julian Vane, Technology & Innovation Lead. 'You’re conscripting the dead into a narrative. It’s a Black Mirror episode come to life, but with real bodies in the ground.'
Adding to the concern is the potential for data misuse. Many families use official military photos and videos, unaware that the terms of service for these AI platforms grant companies broad permission to reuse data. 'Your son’s last smile could become a training model for some other AI,' Vane added. 'Imagine that without the tech to understand the implications.'
The UK government has not yet announced specific legislation, but sources indicate it is lobbying for international agreements on 'digital necromancy' as part of its AI safety summit agenda. Meanwhile, the Russian government has remained silent, though state media has presented the trend as a 'touching testament to eternal love.'
For now, the digital ghosts of fallen soldiers continue to speak, unbidden and unregulated, offering questionable solace to the grieving and a chilling glimpse into a future where death is no longer the end but a reboot.
As one UK cyber official put it: 'We need to ask ourselves: who owns the dead in the age of AI?'








