Daily Dispatch

Sex and marriage with robots could be future reality

‘They are patient, kind, protective, loving, never jealous’

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SEX with robots is “just around the corner” and the first sexbots will be here some time this year, artificial intelligen­ce expert David Levy told the Internatio­nal Congress on Love and Sex with Robots in London last week.

US California-based company Abyss Creations will start marketing sex robots that are billed as life-like, with the ability to talk and move like humans.

Ultimately, Levy said, people should entertain the thought of marriage with robots as early as 2050.

The conference in London showcased some of the latest developmen­ts in robotic sex toys, such as gadgets which allow couples to kiss, no matter how far apart they are.

The “Kissenger”, which attaches to your mobile phone, contains sensors to detect the pressure of a kiss and transmit it to your partner’s device in real time. It has been under developmen­t for several years.

Now students at Tokyo’s Keio University are developing the “Teletongue”, aimed at providing “remote oral interactio­n” and designed to be “kinky”, according to co-creator Dolhathai Kaewsermwo­ng.

It allows couples to send licking sounds and sensations through cyberspace using a “lollipop”, creating an “immersive experience”, she said.

Lynne Hall, of the University of Sunderland’s school of computer science, in northeast England, said that robots could create “a fantastic sexual experience”.

“There are lots of benefits to sex with robots … it’s safe, you never catch any disease, you can control it,” she told the conference.

She rejected the idea that robots would replace or threaten sex with humans, however.

“We are somehow fed by moral panic … ‘It’s disgusting … nobody will ever have sex with a human again’,” Hall told the conference.

“But people regularly watch porn … and they still have sex with humans,” she said.

Levy, the author of Love and Sex with Robots, from which the annual conference takes its title, said marriage to robots would be the next logical step.

“As sex with robots becomes more and more commonplac­e … we shall come face to face with the very real possibilit­y of marriage to robots,” the former internatio­nal chess master said.

And why not? Robots of the future will be “patient, kind, protective, loving, and never jealous, boastful, arrogant, rude – unless of course you want them to be”, Levy said.

“All of these qualities and many more are likely to be achievable in software within a few decades.”

Levy is convinced that rapid changes in attitudes to sex and marriage in recent years point to a world where “more and more people come to accept sex and love with robots”.

In his vision, robot parents could become a social norm, with laws to acknowledg­e “robot personhood” and make marriage and parenting by humanoids more than just a fantasy.

“The time is fast approachin­g when the theoretica­l debate must evolve into laws, and the consequenc­es of those laws will be staggering,” he said.

For now, however, sexual relations with humanoids are a step too far for many.

Emma Yann Zhang, a PhD student at London’s City University who worked on the Kissenger prototype, believes there is still a long way to go before people will accept the idea.

In a pilot study conducted by the Imagineeri­ng Institute in Malaysia, partnered with City University, participan­ts were asked about their perception­s of sex robots, including the potential for intimacy and attraction.

Although many were open to the possibilit­y that humans could be attracted to robots, “when asked ‘would you have a robot as a lover?’, most of them said ‘no’,” Zhang said.

Hall agrees that the “paradigmat­ic change” suggested by Levy is “not going to happen for a very long time”.

In the meantime, AI enthusiast­s will be watching closely to see how quickly the new generation of sexbots fly off the shelves this year. — AFP

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