Mark Zuckerberg
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I just don't know what the balance is going to be.
Yeah.
And, and I mean, it's also, it's novel and it's also a technological feat, right?
It's like being able to pull this off is like, it's a, it's like a pretty impressive.
And I think to some degree, it's just this kind of like awesome experience.
but I mean, but here's some of the, so I put this on this morning and I was like, all right, like, it's like, okay, so this, my hair is a little shorter in this than my physical hair is right now.
I probably need to go get a haircut.
Um, and like, and I actually, I did happen to shave this morning, but, but if I hadn't, you know, I could still have this photorealistic avatar that is, that is more cleanly shaven, right.
Even if I'm, you know, a few days in, um,
So I do think that they're going to start to be these subtle questions that seep in where the avatar is realistic in the sense of this is kind of what you looked like at the time of capture, but it's not necessarily temporarily accurate to exactly what you look like in this moment.
And I think that they're going to end up being a bunch of questions that
that come from that over time that I think are going to be fascinating too.
Well, I mean, I think our physical bodies also fluctuate and change over time too.
So I think there's a similar question of like, which version of that are we?
And it's an interesting identity question because, all right, it's like,
I don't know.
It's like weight fluctuates or things like that.
It's like, I think most people don't tend to think of themselves as the, uh, well, I don't know.
It's an interesting psychological question.
Some, maybe some people, maybe a lot of people do think about themselves as the kind of worst version.