In a harrowing twist on digital grief, Russian civilians are now deploying deepfake avatars to simulate conversations with fallen soldiers. The practice, which combines generative AI with voice cloning, has been co-opted by the Kremlin’s propaganda machine to craft a sanitised narrative of sacrifice. Families upload photos and audio clips of deceased troops to create chatbots that respond in the soldier’s voice and likeness.
These digital ghosts are then paraded on state TV as ‘proof’ of a noble cause. Yet the technology reveals a deeper dystopia: the erosion of mourning. Each scripted reply is a curated performance, stripping war of its ugly reality.
The AI, trained on battlefield communiques, avoids any mention of pain or disillusionment. It is a gilded cage for memory, where love is weaponised. For outsiders, it is a moral minefield.
Should we condemn these families as pawns or pity them as victims? The more pressing question is how long before other nations adopt this macabre form of propaganda. The user experience of society is being rewritten by algorithms, and this time, the soul of truth is at stake.










