Amazon wants Alexa to replicate the voice of your dead grandma

Alexa, what happens when you bring “Black Mirror” to life?

Amazon introduced new technology Wednesday that allows its virtual assistant to replicate a voice after hearing less than a minute of recorded audio.

“Alexa, can Grandma finish reading me ‘The Wizard of Oz’?” the boy asks.

Then, his dead grandma reads out loud from L. Frank Baum’s 1900 novel.

“We are unquestionably living in the golden era of AI, where our dreams and science fiction are becoming a reality,” Rohit Prasad, Amazon’s Alexa AI senior vice president and head scientist, told the audience at the re:MARS conference.

“While AI can’t eliminate that pain of loss, it can definitely make their memories last.”

Alexa already offers less-robotic voices like Samuel L. Jackson, Shaquille O’Neal and Melissa McCarthy, but that required the celebrities to spend hours in the recording studio. Now, Amazon says they can do it with just a few seconds.

“All of the obvious abuses of this aside even the thing they’re marketing it as is just INTENSELY creepy,” one person tweeted.

“Because who hasn’t wanted their deceased loved one to set a kitchen timer for them in subservient-yet-cheerful deadpan?” wrote actress Zelda Williams.

Amazon provided no other details, including when the software could be available, and a spokesperson for the company did not immediately return a request for comment from the Daily News Thursday.

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