Elon Musk said humans may be able to “live forever” within two decades by transferring a close replica of their consciousness into a humanoid robot body. He suggested Neuralink could one day create a “fingerprint” of a person’s mind and load it into Tesla’s Optimus platform, enabling continuity of identity beyond biological limits.
Musk emphasized the copy would not be perfectly identical, but “very close,” noting people change meaningfully over time even without such technology. He framed robotic embodiment as an optional path once the tools mature.
If realized, mind uploading would reshape debates across ethics, regulation, and labor, while expanding addressable markets for neurotech, robotics, and AI. Commercialization would demand rigorous safety standards, legal recognition of digital persons, and interoperable hardware–software stacks.