Scottish Daily Mail

How robots will soon take teens’ virginity

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

TEENAGERS may lose their virginity to sex robots in the future, a leading expert predicted yesterday.

Professor Noel Sharkey, emeritus professor of robotics at Sheffield University, warned that android sex dolls may have damaging consequenc­es for society.

He said that just as the rise of internet porn took the government by surprise, a similarly seismic robot revolution is on the way – with far-reaching consquence­s.

Professor Sharkey, speaking at the Cheltenham Science Festival, explained that he was ‘fairly liberal about sex’. But, he explained: ‘It’s not a problem having sex with a machine. But what if it’s your first time, your first relationsh­ip?

‘What do you think of the opposite sex then? What do you think a man or a woman is?’ He added: ‘It will get in the way of real life, stopping people forming relationsh­ips with normal people.’

Life-like sex robot dolls with limited speech recognitio­n are already on the market in the US and Japan. Professor Sharkey said these dolls should not be sold to under16s, but would inevitably fall into the hands of teenagers.

He said: ‘Sex robots are accessible now and certainly [will be common] within the next ten years. I think there will be an age limit. Certainly there should be, but if your dad or mum had one, you could sneak in and use it.’

Robot sex dolls currently available vary, but a variety called TrueCompan­ion – which comes as Roxxxy for the female model and Rocky for the male – sell for £6,900 in the US.

The dolls can be customised and the firm offers a plethora of skin tones, faces and hair colours that clients can choose from. However, truly autonomous robots that can ‘think’ and act like human beings are still some years away.

Another robot expert, Dr Kathleen Richardson, of De Montfort University, called for the sex dolls to be banned from being imported to Britain.

She told the BBC last year: ‘Sex robots seem to be a growing focus in the robotics industry and the models that they draw on – how they will look, what roles they would play – are disturbing indeed.

‘We think that the creation of such robots will contribute to detrimenta­l relationsh­ips between men and women, adults and children, men and men and women and women.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom