Sensay, a creator of AI-powered digital replicas, has purchased a real island off the Philippines coast and established what it claims is the world’s first AI-powered government. The company has appointed historical figures like Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius as president and Winston Churchill as prime minister to run “Sensay Island,” positioning this as a demonstration of AI’s potential in governance free from political partisanship.
What you should know: The AI government consists entirely of digital replicas of historical figures, each trained on their respective writings, philosophies, and speeches.
- Marcus Aurelius serves as Head of State, with Winston Churchill as Prime Minister and Sun Tzu as Defense Minister.
- The full 17-member cabinet includes figures like Eleanor Roosevelt (Foreign Affairs), Nelson Mandela (Justice), and Leonardo da Vinci (Culture Minister).
- Each AI replica is designed to “emulate the personality, values, and decision-making patterns of the historical figure it represents.”
The island itself: Sensay Island is a real 3.4 km² landmass located off the Philippines coast, featuring beaches, rainforest, and coral lagoons.
- The island appears to lack any existing infrastructure, including Wi-Fi connectivity.
- Visitors can explore the island, though practical amenities seem limited.
- The location is verifiable on Google Maps under its new name.
How citizens can participate: Sensay plans to offer E-residency status that allows people to engage with the AI government remotely.
- E-residents will be able to propose policies through an open-access platform.
- The system aims to “combine direct democracy with AI-enhanced decision-making.”
- Tourism manager Marisol Reyes (also AI-powered) promotes visits to experience “cutting-edge AI governance and traditional Filipino hospitality.”
Why this matters: CEO Dan Thomson frames the project as demonstrating “that AI is a feasible and efficient way to develop and implement policies.”
- Sensay argues AI governance could eliminate political partisanship and bureaucratic delays while increasing transparency.
- The experiment tests whether artificial intelligence can provide more balanced governance than human officials.
- The concept directly challenges decades of science fiction narratives warning against AI-controlled civilizations.
The big picture: While the project appears partly promotional, it represents a real-world test of AI governance principles at a time when automation and artificial intelligence are reshaping traditional institutions across industries.
This island is getting the world’s first AI government, but I’ve read this story before – and it doesn’t end well