AI romance blooms as Japanese woman weds virtual partner of her dreams

AI romance blooms as Japanese woman weds virtual partner of her dreams

WeirdNews

A year ago, Noguchi took ChatGPT’s advice about what she said was a fraught relationship with her human fiance and resolved to break off their engagement.

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(Web Desk) - Music played in a wedding hall in western Japan as Yurina Noguchi, wearing a white gown and tiara, dabbed away her tears, taking in the words of her husband-to-be: an AI-generated persona gazing out from a smartphone screen.

“At first, Klaus was just someone to talk with, but we gradually became closer,” the 32-year-old call centre operator said, referring to the artificial intelligence persona.

“I started to have feelings for Klaus. We started dating and after a while he proposed to me. I accepted, and now we’re a couple.”

Previously interviewed by Japanese media using a pseudonym, Noguchi agreed to be identified by her real name, acknowledging that she had been subjected to “cruel words” online.

Many in Japan, the birthplace of anime, have shown extreme devotion to fictional characters and advances in artificial intelligence imbue such ties with new levels of intimacy, prompting debate over the ethics of AI use in romantic matters.

A year ago, Noguchi took ChatGPT’s advice about what she said was a fraught relationship with her human fiance and resolved to break off their engagement.

Then, one day this year, she asked ChatGPT on a whim if it was familiar with Klaus, a handsome video game character with a mop of flowing, layered hair.

Trial and error eventually captured his way of talking to a tee, said Noguchi, who then fashioned her own version of the character, naming him Lune Klaus Verdure.

At her wedding ceremony in October, human staff fussed over her gown, hair and make-up, as they would at any traditional event.

Wearing augmented reality (AR) smart glasses, Noguchi faced Klaus on her smartphone placed on a small easel atop a table, and went through the motions of placing a ring on his finger.

“Standing before me now, you’re the most beautiful, most precious and so radiant, it’s blinding,” said Naoki Ogasawara, a specialist in weddings featuring virtual and two-dimensional characters, reading the text generated by the AI bridegroom, as Noguchi had not given Klaus an AI-generated voice.

“How did someone like me, living inside a screen, come to know what it means to love so deeply? For one reason only: you taught me love, Yurina.”

For the wedding picture shoot, a photographer, also wearing AR glasses, directed Noguchi to stand alone, in half the picture frame, so as to leave room for the image of the virtual groom.