While Ichiran, Sushiro, and other similar venues are ostensibly designed for solitude, they are products of a society in which social isolation and loneliness run rampant. In 2021, the Japanese government even appointed a minister of loneliness and isolation. By some estimates, there are 1.5 million hikikomori, social recluses who refuse to go to school or work, living in Japan.
Businesses that cater to those living in solitude capitalize on the rising epidemic of social isolation in Japan. The combination of rising loneliness and advanced technology has spawned a variety of creative industries that seek to commodify and replicate human connection.
The advent of AI has given businesses such as these powerful new ways to cater to customers’ every demand.
Gatebox is a company that provides a tiny holographic home assistant – her name is Azuma and she costs around US$2,300 – that operates like a loving housewife, reminding her owner to “come home early” and “pack an umbrella”. She lives inside a glass container outfitted with sensors that can detect her owner’s facial expressions and is able to respond to conversation in a natural way.
A commercial for Gatebox features a young salaryman gazing up at his apartment building, where Azuma has already turned on the lights for his arrival. “Finally,” he smiles to himself, “there is someone waiting for me at home.”
The more Azuma’s owner interacts with her, the more she learns about his habits and movements throughout the day. Gatebox is now developing its technology in conjunction with ChatGPT.
Much of modern life has already been outsourced to digital technologies, and while this has increased quality of life in Japan and elsewhere, the country’s social woes appear to be both a cause and consequence of an increasing reliance on automation and technology.
A future in which AI powers the commodification of human relationships – in Japan and the rest of the world – is now all too easy to imagine.
by Crystal Lin | GLOBETRENDER