Funeral homes and grieving families are increasingly using AI chatbots like ChatGPT to generate obituaries for deceased loved ones, according to a new Washington Post investigation. This trend represents another example of artificial intelligence automating deeply personal human experiences, sparking debate about whether technology should handle such emotionally charged tasks.
The big picture: AI obituary tools have gained significant traction in the death care industry, with the technology being celebrated at last year’s National Funeral Directors Association conference in Las Vegas as potentially “the greatest advancement in funeral-home technology since some kind of embalming tool.”
Key details: Multiple AI-powered obituary generators have emerged, including CelebrateAlley and an Innovation Awards runner-up called Nemu, which catalogs deceased persons’ belongings for family distribution.
What supporters are saying: Proponents argue AI serves as an “enabler of human connection” during difficult times.
The concerns: Critics worry that AI-generated obituaries lack the authentic imperfections that make memorials meaningful.
Why this matters: The trend raises questions about whether automating grief processing is healthy, as writing obituaries traditionally serves as a cathartic release that honors the deceased through personal effort and reflection.