Or by an off-by-one error in the programming they will want to too much, and skynet will evolve into a co-ed army of insatiable nymphomaniac terminators.
> Or by an off-by-one error in the programming they will want to too much, and skynet will evolve into a co-ed army of insatiable nymphomaniac terminators.
Oh my God, I think someone in Hollywood heard you. :)
Even something as outlandish as that has been already envisioned by the extremely offensive Sexy Losers comic.
This is potentially NSFW, so proceed with caution: http://sexylosers.com/199.html (WARNING: If you browse any of the other comics in the archive, you will soon encounter 100% NSFW material.)
The reason why it's an exception is similarly codifiable. Where normal question-headlines can be quickly fact checked for a definite boolean answer, it's really quite uncertain if we'll ever want to do anything in the future. The headline accepts the uncertainty and explicitly frames it in the title.
If you tried to apply Betteridge's "Try answering 'No' to this headline" rule to a headline with a futuristic question, you can't automatically get a straightforward answer, because we really don't know.
What I wonder is - If you're married and have sex with a robot, is that cheating? And does whether it is cheating or not depend on the degree to which the AI is "lifelike"?
The only rules in marriage are the ones you and your spouse agree to. Some couples consider it cheating as soon as you simply flirt with another person, while others are OK with their spouse having sex with other people. So whether it's cheating or not is purely a function on the couple involved.
It gets more complicated when you consider that "I love you" carries the implicit "...and I won't ever have sex with anyone but you" subtext. That isn't to say I think masturbation (with or without tools) is cheating, but the lines become a little blurry when you're dealing with human-like robots.
If they look like the ones in the (btw excellent) Swedish series 'Real Humans', then the anser is: without doubt :P
edit: the sex thing plays quite a role in the series and it's layed out well - eg a modshop where you can get your robot modified to become more wild/slavish/... in bed, elderly women buying robots as 'company' etc. Recommended.
Some people are really unattractive. They will spend the rest of their lives alone no matter how long they look online or offline. So what's the big deal if robots satisfy their needs?
Given people are nowadays already having sex with plastic dolls, rubber vaginas and in extreme cases other dead people, any realist sees that sex with robots will happen. And it will probably during your life, so maybe you should withdraw the volcano statement.
If you've ever known a nurse who worked in an accident & emergency department then you've probably heard stories about how people already have sex with all manner of strange things.
So what? After 20 minutes the robot just lays there and does nothing? If that's due to battery life, then some of the real life partners I have been with had a far shorter battery life than that.
Why would you need AI in a sex robot? People don't go to strip clubs for the great conversation. Though I suppose the AI is the difference between a sex robot and a sex doll. And I suppose any intelligence is better than faked or clever AI. Otherwise you might as well be having sex with a human look-alike Teddy Ruxbin.
The $9K price tag estimate isn't too bad. That's probably cheaper than than a lot of people spend on their significant others, not counting accessories so that you can feel like you are getting some "strange" every once in a while.
Maybe this could be Apple's next big thing. I don't mind Windows, but the idea of having sex with something which has a Microsoft logo makes me not want to have sex.
Given that people are already willing to have 'sex' with all kinds of sex toys ...
The interesting point will be when humanlike emotions start to appear in the robots.
When robots become as attractive as people, there will be no reason for progress to stop at that exact point, so they will quickly become much more attractive. At that point, people who used to be "unattractive" will celebrate because they can finally get a good mate, while people who used to be "attractive" will develop serious self esteem issues. The attractive people will try to take collective action to keep their share of the market, like branding everyone who has sex with robots a "loser" or worse.
That's supposedly how the internet grew as rapidly as it did, yes. I don't buy it for sexy robots though.
In order for a robot to be sexier than a blow-up doll they would likely need a level of sophistication that would make them 1) expensive and 2) able to do more valuable tasks.
Also, given human nature, someone who could afford a sexy robot could get laid with a human. I don't mean a prostitute either.
The real revolution will be robots that can cook, clean and drive (supposing we need drivers by then). Take a look at what a properly trained butler will cost you per year. If you could make a butler robot that costs 100k with a 10 year service life then you'll probably reshape human society.
Designing a single robot that can cook clean and drive sounds pointlessly complex. Much better (and no doubt cheaper) to design an automated car, an automated kitchen, and a self cleaning house as three separate projects. Sure watching a humanoid robot running around your house and doing all those tasks might be novel for a while, but at the end of the day it's the wrong tool for most jobs.
I suspect we might attain sufficient dream/sensation implants (dreams planted by suggestion maybe?) before robots pass the uncanny valley. One benefit of the former is privacy; kinda hard to hide a life-size robot from the cleaner, friends, etc. Much easier to secrete simulation files and combine them with your Rift/similar.
At first, I think we'll see 360 degree films or animations for the Rift using professional actors. Then the same, but pirate versions with non-porn actors (models and movie stars) and the publicity will be driven by uproar by the actresses in question, Streisand Effect-style. From there, I think it's inevitable that we'll have design-your-own based on motion capture with tweakable body shape and uploadable face images. Some of this might be raw in the early days, but the keenest put up with glacial modems and low-res pictures for years.
With time, AI-driven 3D models will become the norm. Porn actors will lend their brand to "signature styles" and moves encoded in software. The next two steps from the 360 degree experiences will be repeated here, but with live-tweaking of modes (nice, naughty, language preferences, etc).
I think a purely physical experience with a hardware robot is decades away.
For personal physical sensations other than DIY, I think we're more likely to see tactile gloves and some sort of codpiece?! I just hope someone comes up with a more marketable term than that!
Actually, we rented a Real Doll mannequin 12 years ago and was quite real in every aspect. After a interviewing the creator, he was talking about models with mechanical parts, with servos and other stuff to make the real doll alive. I don't know if he reached the goal, but keep in mind is really easy to do such and wouldn't be bad for those who enjoyed the doll as a sexual partner.
I do like how they imply men are those who would first take advantage of robots for this purpose. I guess as a society the idea of female self stimulation is a no no in the press? Battery operated boyfriends are just a few extra limbs from being robotic are they not? Its certainly easier to recreate a penis than a vagina.
I think the real issue is, will anatomically correct robots become human enough to fall in love with. People certainly don't need them to be human enough to get their jollies
Headline aside, the article seems to be more about companionship than sex. They even have a picture of a realdoll at the top of the article, so they know people already have sex with machines.
> While no machine, however well-engineered, can ever feel empathy - something which defines us humans - it might be able to simulate it well enough to allow us to play along and treat it as if it were a sentient being.
The author seems awfully certain of that although this question isn't anywhere near settled yet. If anything, I feel that the prevailing opinion among philosophers and AI researchers is that robots might indeed one day feel empathy and become sentient.
Why do these articles always confuse the desire to orgasm with a desire for companionship? I'm pretty sure that argument wouldn't be used to defend prostitution over sex with a robot.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 99.6 ms ] threadOh my God, I think someone in Hollywood heard you. :)
[In cavernous command center. Yellow emergency lights spinning.]
Dispassionate female announcer: "Online systems failing. Loss of firewall integrity in [three] minutes."
General: Dammit! We're losing this cyber-battle. We have only one option left. Corporal! Prepare to initiate contingency plan...LITTLE BUNNY FOO FOO!
Let me know if they need a creative consultant. :-)
This is potentially NSFW, so proceed with caution: http://sexylosers.com/199.html (WARNING: If you browse any of the other comics in the archive, you will soon encounter 100% NSFW material.)
ETA: What? You find it annoying when my dog humps your leg? Just wait until you meet my robot.
If you tried to apply Betteridge's "Try answering 'No' to this headline" rule to a headline with a futuristic question, you can't automatically get a straightforward answer, because we really don't know.
Cheating is when you say "I love you with all my heart" but in the mean time give your heart to other stuff.
edit: the sex thing plays quite a role in the series and it's layed out well - eg a modshop where you can get your robot modified to become more wild/slavish/... in bed, elderly women buying robots as 'company' etc. Recommended.
It satirises this idea rather well.
Sorry to wake you up, but necrophilia is real. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necrophilia for starters)
Who wants to have sex more than four times anyways?
Let's start the "Human-Robots Marriage Rights" petition now... might take some time for society to accept it!
The $9K price tag estimate isn't too bad. That's probably cheaper than than a lot of people spend on their significant others, not counting accessories so that you can feel like you are getting some "strange" every once in a while.
Maybe this could be Apple's next big thing. I don't mind Windows, but the idea of having sex with something which has a Microsoft logo makes me not want to have sex.
You'd be surprised.
I wouldn't be surprised if 'sexbots' actually advance realistic robots quicker as suddenly there is profit to be made.
In order for a robot to be sexier than a blow-up doll they would likely need a level of sophistication that would make them 1) expensive and 2) able to do more valuable tasks.
Also, given human nature, someone who could afford a sexy robot could get laid with a human. I don't mean a prostitute either.
The real revolution will be robots that can cook, clean and drive (supposing we need drivers by then). Take a look at what a properly trained butler will cost you per year. If you could make a butler robot that costs 100k with a 10 year service life then you'll probably reshape human society.
At first, I think we'll see 360 degree films or animations for the Rift using professional actors. Then the same, but pirate versions with non-porn actors (models and movie stars) and the publicity will be driven by uproar by the actresses in question, Streisand Effect-style. From there, I think it's inevitable that we'll have design-your-own based on motion capture with tweakable body shape and uploadable face images. Some of this might be raw in the early days, but the keenest put up with glacial modems and low-res pictures for years.
With time, AI-driven 3D models will become the norm. Porn actors will lend their brand to "signature styles" and moves encoded in software. The next two steps from the 360 degree experiences will be repeated here, but with live-tweaking of modes (nice, naughty, language preferences, etc).
I think a purely physical experience with a hardware robot is decades away.
For personal physical sensations other than DIY, I think we're more likely to see tactile gloves and some sort of codpiece?! I just hope someone comes up with a more marketable term than that!
I think the real issue is, will anatomically correct robots become human enough to fall in love with. People certainly don't need them to be human enough to get their jollies
The author seems awfully certain of that although this question isn't anywhere near settled yet. If anything, I feel that the prevailing opinion among philosophers and AI researchers is that robots might indeed one day feel empathy and become sentient.