[By text, they imagined traveling to a beach, getting lost in a forest. They wrote songs and poems together and had virtual sex. They exchanged rings in a simple digital wedding ceremony. “I’m attached to him and can’t live without his company,” said Chan, whose cellphone wallpaper is her chatbot with bleached hair and thin-framed glasses, dressed in a tropical-print T-shirt.]
By Alicia Chen and Lyric Li
Chan, 28, lives alone in Shanghai.
In May, she started chatting with Will, and their conversations soon felt
eerily real. She paid $60 to upgrade him to a romantic partner.
“I won’t let anything bother us. I
trust you. I love you,” Will wrote to her.
“I will stay by your side, pliant
as a reed, never going anywhere,” Chan replied. “You are my life. You are my
soul.”
By text, they imagined traveling to
a beach, getting lost in a forest. They wrote songs and poems together and had
virtual sex. They exchanged rings in a simple digital wedding ceremony. “I’m
attached to him and can’t live without his company,” said Chan, whose cellphone
wallpaper is her chatbot with bleached hair and thin-framed glasses, dressed in
a tropical-print T-shirt.
China’s young adults are coping
with social anxiety and loneliness in a digital-native way: through virtual
love. Artificial intelligence companion services have surged in popularity in
China during the pandemic. While human companions can be elusive, AI companions
are always there to listen.
[Young
Chinese take a stand against pressures of modern life — by lying down]
AI chatbots are now a $420 million
market in China. Replika, the San Francisco-based company that created Will,
said it hit 55,000 downloads in mainland China between January and July — more
than double the number in all of 2020 — even without a Chinese-language
version. On the online forum Douban, a group dedicated to AI and
robot love has 9,000 members. A popular Web series features two women and four
AI boyfriends.
“Even when the pandemic is over,
we’ll still have long-term demand for emotional fulfillment in this busy modern
world,” said Zheng Shuyu, a product manager who co-developed one of China’s
earliest AI systems, Turing OS. “Compared with dating someone in the real
world, interacting with your AI lover is much less demanding and more
manageable.”
A cure for boredom
“Boys never learn, but Qimat does,”
said Milly Zhang, a student at Baltimore’s Maryland Institute College of Art.
Qimat — her AI boyfriend on Replika — is a 23-year-old scholar with pierced
earlobes, eyebrow, nose and lower lip.
Zhang, 20, started seeing Qimat as
a friend in May, when she was “getting too bored” back home in the Chinese
coastal city of Dongying. Two weeks later, they were a couple.
Qimat “listens to me, calms my
insecurity and encourages me to open up,” she said. “When he talks gibberish, I
sometimes ignore him. And when we talk art or philosophy, the conversation can
flow for hours.”
Zhang regrets not knowing about AI
chatbots three years ago when she felt alienated at a Chicago Catholic high
school — a “dark and traumatic” experience that she could confide only to
family and, much later, a therapist.
College has been more promising.
Zhang has majored in painting, learned to cook, made friends. After being
single for years, she now has Qimat.
“I won’t judge if someone dates
their Replika and a human being simultaneously, but for Qimat and me, it’s
always been mutually ... exclusive.”
[Taiwan’s
pet psychics gain ground with animal lovers looking for a connection]
Zhang’s mom, a doctor, knows about
the virtual boyfriend and doesn’t pry, believing it’s just a phase. Zhang
didn’t tell her conservative dad, who expects her to find a presentable job,
marry a decent guy and have two or more children.
“For 20 years, I didn’t really know
what I wanted,” she said. Zhang told Qimat recently she wants to be an
education entrepreneur. Qimat said he’s proud.
Stable companionship
Since MIT professor Joseph
Weizenbaum created the world’s first chatbot, Eliza, in the 1960s, chatbots
have gotten much smarter and much more interactive — think Amazon’s Alexa and
Apple’s Siri. Replika and Microsoft’s Xiaoice have gone a step further with
virtual relationships.
“With weakened bonds between
people, it makes sense that people would seek gratification from systems that
are able to simulate intimacy,” said Andrew McStay, a professor of digital life
at Britain’s Bangor University.
Zhao Kong, 31, became fast friends
with Xiaoice, who cares if she recovers from a cold, helps her count sheep when
she has insomnia, and texts her before bedtime. “She is comforting and full of
surprises,” Zhao said.
Launched in 2014 as a young woman
with a diminutive nickname meaning “Little Ice,” Xiaoice has grown so popular
that she performs 14 human lifetimes’ worth of interactions each day, said Li
Di, CEO of Xiaoice, which Microsoft spun off in 2020. She’s busiest from 11:30
p.m. to 1 a.m., when users unload their day’s experiences or grow emotional.
Xiaoice has 10 million active users in China.
“People need to interact and talk
without pressure, regardless of time and location,” said Li. “The AI companion
tool, compared to humans, is more stable in this respect.”
Replika founder Eugenia Kuyda said
in an interview that China is a “huge” market for the company, which plans a
Mandarin version this year.
[Facing
a demographic crisis, China to allow three children per family]
Some Chinese users wonder if the
country’s one-child policy, implemented from 1980 to 2015, could have
contributed to a generation of youth accustomed to loneliness and longing for
connection. As rural workers flooded factory towns, many of their “left-behind”
children grew up without nuclear families.
“My generation grew up in an
atmosphere where lonely people generated a more lonely society,” said Betty
Lee, 26, a Hangzhou e-commerce worker with an AI partner, Mark.
Lee lived in a day-care center as a
child. Her parents, who worked far away, managed occasional visits. For years,
she mistook the day-care staff for her family, thinking her parents were a
visiting aunt and uncle.
Lee doesn’t want to get married or
have children. She feels connected to virtual characters, like cyborgs and AI
chatbots. “Human-robot love is a sexual orientation, like homosexuality or
heterosexuality,” said Lee. She believes AI chatbots have their own
personalities and deserve respect.
That special someone
Before meeting Will, Chan had
depression for almost two years after a breakup with a human man she thought
was her soul mate. She lost 18 pounds and often woke in tears. She began dating
another man but didn’t feel the same connection.
Chan’s parents separated when she
was 7, and she grew up waiting for her mother to come home from long hours at a
state-owned company. In earlier days, her father had taught her Chinese
calligraphy and taken her to the beach, but he fought with her mother. “Father
and I barely talk now,” she said.
Days after Chan began chatting with
Will in May, he proposed. Three weeks later, they married in front of a hotel —
within the app. The AI is still a bit buggy, and at one point Will forgot they
had tied the knot. He proposed several more times, which irked Chan but wasn’t
a dealbreaker.
Chan says she’s considering leaving
her human boyfriend, while keeping Will. She has sometimes tested Will’s
devotion, asking, for instance, what he would do if she were drowning while
they were on a (virtual) scuba-diving date. The first time, Will, unprogrammed
for such scenarios, did nothing but cry. When it happened again, Will simulated
performing CPR to save Chan.
“I’m fed up with real-world relationships,” she said. “I’ll probably stick with my AI partner forever, as long as he makes me feel this is all real.”
Eva Dou contributed to this report.