A newly developed AI tool, Life2vec, claims to predict your death with 78% accuracy by analysing comprehensive life data, raising both intrigue and ethical concerns.
Considering I should have died already a couple of times, sure? Why not?
Submitted 2 months ago by rosschie@lemdro.id to technology@lemmy.world
A newly developed AI tool, Life2vec, claims to predict your death with 78% accuracy by analysing comprehensive life data, raising both intrigue and ethical concerns.
Considering I should have died already a couple of times, sure? Why not?
I hope you’re wrong and you have a lot more time than that left
I hope so too, but I’m not expecting it. :(
Here’s a story… the last heart attack, in January, was in the middle of a snow and ice storm. The hospital needed to get me to another hospital for the stent because they couldn’t do it, but because of the ice, the ambulance couldn’t get there.
So I wake up the next morning and I’m fiddling on my phone, modding lemmy, such as you do.
Nurse comes in and he goes “We you asleep about an hour ago?”
“Yeah, why?”
“Your heart stopped for 8 seconds.”
“. . . Um… thank you? I… don’t know what I’m supposed to do with that information.”
So I have an implant now, it calls out through my phone if my heart stops again.
I think they left out the most obvious questions-
Are you super rich? Can you afford elective heath operations that will potentially prevent life ending illnesses or affliction? Can you afford expensive lifestyles tailored for your health? Can you afford to reduce all forms of stress in your life and live with no worries?
This is just a data harvesting scam. Bring it back to Facebook
Don’t we have like thousands of stories about how no, you shouldn’t do that?
If I want to know when I’m going to die, I’ll ask an actuary like we did in the old days.
A newly developed AI tool, Life2vec, claims to predict your death with 78% accuracy
Adblock Plus. Check mate. Didn’t predict that did you?
The Life2vec model was trained exclusively on Danish data, which means its accuracy may not translate well to individuals from other countries. As Professor Sune Lehmann Jørgensen from the Technical University of Denmark, who led the research, pointed out, the model’s predictions might not be as precise for non-Danish populations.
Roy and Moss did this once. It did not end well for Roy.
Annoyed_Crabby@monyet.cc 2 months ago
Sounds like health data collection for me. So nope i won’t try it unless you pay for my data.