

A contemporary approach can take a serious look at what normalizes immortalization and after death. Remembrance is important. The contrary between the world before the pre-digital era and after digital de-humanization and devaluation of people. We could be on an algorithm, or you can even witness people's death experiences shared videos they are nameless. Unconsented porn, humiliated victims of these videos are nameless. We sure sometimes want to be Anonymous.
But what if we can work on memorials that can re-humanize lost ones digital world has its codes under any visual or digital material that can be more durable than marble. It could be more immortal than our aspects of infinity in the living world. It is not a way of an approach to creating chat-bots that imitate or death relatives but a space abstract from keeping the sense of our loved ones with digital dimensional.
Yet, in a moral sense, what material can be is not of what but for who if issues like femicide or war crimes is a sort of Saints, a martyr who believes in excellence and a positive future of humankind. That unexpected things happen to these victims because they are unarmed and have hope and a belief in free life and the right to live before these disturbances of glitches and darken souls of persistent misery of the lousy anonymity in action.