Panasonic has created an AI clone of its late founder Konosuke Matsushita based on his writings, speeches, and over 3,000 voice recordings.

Known as Japan’s “god of management,” the Panasonic icon is one of the most respected by the Japanese business community, and comes back to life in digital form to impart wisdom directly to those he never met in person.

“As the number of people who received training directly from Matsushita has been on the decline, we decided to use generative AI technology to pass down our group’s founding vision to the next generation,” the company said in a statement. Codeveloped with the University of Tokyo-affiliated Matsuo Institute, the model can reproduce how a person thinks or talks. The company aims to further develop the digital clone to help make business decisions in the future.

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.orgOP
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    5 days ago

    I mean, I don’t see anything wrong with striving for perfection. But in pursuit of that, the Boomers seem to just double down on what they’ve always done rather than change course.

    • Krauerking
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      5 days ago

      Because perfection is unattainable. And it’s often used misinformed on what makes perfection. The idea of a perfect person has often been used by racists, misogynists and sociopaths on the idea of what makes other not perfect.

      We live in imperfection and it has to be embraced to be able to adapt properly and not try to push others into rigid ideas of society. We are not all the same.

      Strive for it sure but don’t think it’s a goal. It’s a myth. But yeah Boomers have bought into it hard and look how that rigid mindset is causing the rest of us pain.