Jamaica Gleaner

New app logs mutual consent to sex

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SAN FRANCISCO (TNS): IF THERE are more awkward moments than those involving teenage sexual experience­s, they are the insecure seconds leading up to the deed itself.

But a mother of three aims to both break the tension and confirm mutual consent before sexual intercours­e via Yes to Sex, a new app out last Friday for both iOS and Android.

In less than 25 seconds, partners can whip out a smartphone, fire up the app and flash through a series of one-touch agreements that culminate in a request to record a short audio confirmati­on that the parties have agreed to intercours­e. A safe word also is generated. Both parties agree to stop having sex if one partner says the word.

The app essentiall­y amounts to a technologi­cal record of consent. Once a user closes out of the app, no informatio­n remains saved on any phone. But the date, time, place and voice recordings are stored on Yes to Sex’s secure servers, which, according to a company press release, use “the same data encryption as the Department of Defense (and) the records can only be retrieved with courtendor­sed orders, ensuring anonymity,” the release stated.

“As a mother, I was horrified to learn that every month in the US over 1.7 million sexually transmitte­d infections are passed on and 25 per cent of female students and six to eight per cent of male students are sexually assaulted each year on campuses,” app creator Wendy Mandell-Geller said in a statement. “I want to empower teens and young adults to initiate conversati­ons with their partners about consent and the use of protection in a modern, approachab­le manner.”

Of course, the downside for any user is the prospect of watching a partner click a tab that says bluntly, “Sorry, I’m not interested.” But better that than proceeding under false impression­s.

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