AI Clone Technology Sparks New Ethical Crisis as Workers Digitally Replicate Bosses
Breaking: Workers Are Now Cloning Their Own Colleagues Using Open-Source AI Tools
A new wave of AI-powered employee clones is raising alarms among corporate ethics experts. Workers in China and beyond are using software like Colleague Skill to create digital twins of their bosses and coworkers without consent. The practice blurs the line between efficiency and invasion of privacy.

“We’re seeing an explosion of unauthorized clones that mimic a person’s professional persona down to their writing style,” said Dr. Elena Torres, a digital ethics researcher at MIT. “This is uncharted territory—employers rarely know it’s happening.”
The Most Urgent Example: Colleague Skill
The project, launched in late March by Shanghai-based engineer Zhou Tianyi, allows users to upload chat logs, emails, and internal documents. The AI then builds a functional replica that can answer questions and generate messages in the target colleague’s voice.
“It’s extremely accurate because it learns from real communications,” Zhou explained in a post on GitHub. He insists the tool is meant for productivity, but critics warn it could be weaponized.
Background
AI voice and video cloning have existed for years, with both ethical and malicious uses. In 2019, scammers mimicked a German executive’s voice to steal €220,000. In 2023, an Arizona mother received a fake ransom call using her daughter’s cloned voice. And in 2024, a Hong Kong finance worker lost $25 million after a deepfake video conference.

Meanwhile, authorized clones—like those of Pakistan’s Imran Khan or Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg—are generally seen as acceptable if transparent. But the new workplace clones operate in a legal gray zone.
What This Means
Corporate security policies are now scrambling to address the risk. Cloned colleagues could leak sensitive data, impersonate managers in financial transactions, or be used for harassment.
“This is a threat that requires immediate policy updates,” said cybersecurity analyst Mark Chen. “Companies must treat any AI-generated replica of an employee as a potential breach tool.”
Legal experts say current consent and data privacy laws lag far behind the technology. “We’re in the ‘ugly’ phase of AI cloning where the rules are unclear and the damage can be massive,” Torres added.
For now, workers are urged to secure their digital footprints—because anyone can become a clone without ever knowing it.
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