Are sex robots perverted or a practical weapon in the fight against human trafficking?
Scientist Sergi Santos designed sex dolls with artificial intelligence
that will not only earn him money but may also be used to staff brothels
and combat sex trafficking
Spanish scientist Sergi Santos has dedicated his career to designing silicone sex dolls .
The robots have wigs and artificial brains that will not only earn him
money but may also be used to staff brothels and help combat sex trafficking .
But the arrival of sex robots has divided opinion. Here, the Thomson Reuters Foundation explores the complex issues that have been raised by the increasingly life-like robots.
In the hilly outskirts of sunny Barcelona, Spanish scientist
Sergi Santos looks proudly over what appears to be five busty women in
tiny shorts and tank tops perched around his living room.
Sex robots are becoming increasingly lifelike (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)But look a little closer and it is clear they are not women
but silicone sex dolls with wigs and artificial brains that Santos
believes will not only earn him money but may also be used to staff
brothels and help combat sex trafficking.
"Hi Samantha," Santos said, switching on one of his dolls.
"I'm
here, what's up?" the robot replied, its bright blue eyes staring into
nothing as a cable plugged into its neck charges the computer processor
in its "brain".
Artificial intelligence (AI) is making its way
into the global sex market, bringing with it a revolution in robotic
"sextech" designed to offer sexual gratification with a near-human
touch.
Spanish scientist Sergi Santos (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)But the arrival of sex robots has divided opinion.
Inventors like Santos argue they can potentially replace prostitutes,
reduce sex trafficking and help lonely people, while critics say they
objectify women and normalise sexism and rape culture.
"Get
sexy," instructed Santos, 39, who founded Synthea Amatus in 2015 and
aims to start selling his sex robots in coming weeks, starting from
about $2,000 each.
"I'm ready, what about you? I hope you are. I
enjoy being with you, always," the big-breasted robot replied, while
Santos' wife Maritsa Kissamitaki works at a desk in their home office.
Santos, who founded his company Synthea Amatus, aims to introduce sex robots with artificial intelligence to the consumer market (Image: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Lin T)Roboticists like Santos and those from US-based Abyss
Creations are racing to become the first in the world to bring sex
robots - which talk and respond to touch through AI technology - to the
consumer market.
Sex robots at bigger companies like Abyss Creations will start from about $10,000 depending on added extras.
Sex robots at bigger companies like Abyss Creations will start from about $10,000 depending on added extras (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)Experts say the increasingly life-like robots raise complex
issues that should be considered by policymakers and the public -
including whether use of such devices should be encouraged to curb
prostitution and sex trafficking, for sex offenders, or for people with
disabilities.
Robot brothels
London-based AI researcher
David Levy predicted in his 2007 book "Love and Sex with Robots" that
humans would have sex, fall in love and even marry robots by 2050.
"I
don't see anything wrong in using a sex robot to provide sexual
satisfaction to people who can't achieve it in relationships with other
humans. It's much better for lonely and miserable people than no sex at
all," he said.
"Sex robots are just providing an alternative."
Roboticist Santos and his wife Maritza Kissamitaki with their dolls (Image: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/Lin T)As the technology advances, brothels in global cities will
be staffed by robot prostitutes, says Levy, and like most consumer
electronics, such as laptops and mobile phones, the cost of sex robots
will drop - to the point where it will be cheaper than paying for a
human prostitute.
He believes as the stigma of having sex with robots wears off, robotics could disrupt the sex trafficking industry.
"The
advent of sex robots will probably reduce the popularity of having sex
with a sex worker. And if it's going to have that effect, it will also
reduce sex trafficking," Levy said in an interview with the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
Santos believes, as the stigma of having sex with robots wears off, robotics could disrupt the sex trafficking industry (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)"I don't see that anybody can possibly be harmed by people
having sex with robots, so I think that the idea of a robot brothel
should not only be legal it should probably be encouraged in order to
reduce sex trafficking."
Globally, nearly 46 million live as
slaves, forced to work, sold for sex, trapped in debt bondage or born
into servitude, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index by
Australia-based rights group Walk Free Foundation.
Santos said owning a sex robot could lead to fewer people visiting prostitutes which would combat sex trafficking (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)Santos said owning a sex robot could lead to fewer people visiting prostitutes which would combat sex trafficking.
"Should
you be trafficking humans? I think it's obvious - no. So what we should
do is stop that, and make people spend the money on the doll," he said.
Power and control
However
ethicist and founder of the Campaign Against Sex Robots Kathleen
Richardson disagrees that sex robots will curb sex trafficking but says
they will be another "option on the menu" alongside human prostitutes.
Campaigner Kathleen
Richardson disagrees that sex robots will curb sex trafficking but says
they will be another "option on the menu" alongside human prostitutes (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation)She said comparing prostitutes to robots was dehumanising
and the sexual objectification of women through sex dolls was also
problematic.
"I don't think sex robots will reduce sex
trafficking. It will just become another option on the menu for an
already distorted and dehumanised commercial market," said Richardson,
an academic at De Montfort University who has been studying robotics for
more than a decade.
"There's something more insidious going on
in sex trafficking about how you control and dominate another human
being - and the pleasure you derive from rape."
Richardson said sex dolls and robots could even be dangerous, used as proxies to act out fantasies like rape or paedophilia.
"Giving
someone who wants to rape children and fantasises about that a doll
with orifices that he can penetrate is ... dangerous. It's absolutely,
extraordinarily irresponsible to promote that idea in wider society,"
she said.
Richardson said sex dolls and robots could even be dangerous, used as proxies to act out fantasies like rape or paedophilia (Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation) The Salvation Army in Britain, which supports survivors of sex trafficking, said it opposed the use of sex robots because it rewards people for exerting control over another .
"Trafficked
people are being seen as a commodity and we don't think that sex with a
robot is going to reduce that," said Kathy Taylor from the charity's
Anti-Trafficking and Modern Slavery unit.
"The
reason some people purchase sex is because it can be a power dynamic in
itself. And if you can buy a robot, does that not normalise this
distorted power dynamic?"
But Santos, who aims to develop male
robots as well, said sex robots had the potential to benefit society -
from helping closeted lesbian, gay and bisexual people, to preventing
sexually transmitted diseases, and progressing AI technology.
"Technology
is always like that: people are against it, people are for it. But
eventually, if you develop technology in the right way, you'll always
have many benefits for people," he said.
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