Will robot orgasms make actual sex obsolete?

Teledildonic technology -- otherwise known as computer-aided sex toys -- could change intimacy as we know it

Published July 28, 2014 7:13PM (EDT)

Optimistic robot --- Image by © Volker Moehrke/Corbis                (Volker Moehrke)
Optimistic robot --- Image by © Volker Moehrke/Corbis (Volker Moehrke)

Think sex robots are funny? Strange? Unnecessary? Well, just wait until you're using one -- because that's exactly what sex toy pioneers are aiming to make happen on a large scale. According to Betabeat, the fields of teledildonics and cyberdildonics -- fancy ways to describe an array of new sex toys that rely on computers -- could change the way we perceive sexual pleasure forever. But do they have the power to replace the intimacy of true human-to-human physical connection?

Maybe not, but if developers have it their way, computers will soon be able to enhance human sexual experience to the point of no return. Companies like OhMiBod, the sex toy line founded by husband-wife duo Brian and Suki Dunham in 2006, are setting the groundwork for computer-engineered orgasms to become a mainstream reality. Recently, OhMiBod introduced blueMotion, a Bluetooth-enabled wearable vibrator that one user controls through a wireless app while the other keeps it close to sensitive areas.

As Betabeat reporter Jordyn Taylor found, the toy has plenty of bang for its bytes: It not only allows users to control the toy's vibration by voice control or tap pattern, but can do so over huge distances. Such teledildonic innovation could have huge benefits for long-distance couples, Taylor points out, but it also has the potential to advance our sexual expectations:

Suppose instead of using their hand to make you orgasm, your partner could always -- not just when they were out of town -- command a remote-controlled vibrator to do it instead. ...  At first, the notion can seem a little scary: if teledildonics become mainstream enough that we can digitally perfect all our sexual experiences, would we ever go back to back to having non-tech-enhanced sex? Would everyone’s attempts at pleasing their partners without toys seem lousy in comparison with what, say, OhMiBod blueMotion could offer?

Taylor thinks not, and I'm inclined to agree. Part of what's appealing about teledildonics is the opportunity to engage with another person in some way from far away; instead of simply acting like a normal vibrator, for instance, tools like blueMotion add another human being to the mix. That's a crucial example of intimacy that can be mimicked to an extent, but never fully replaced by a computer. So perhaps the makers of blueMotion and other cyberdildonic toys really will change our sexual expectations permanently: They'll make us expect our mechanical, robotic or computer-based sexual aides to live up to their human counterparts.


By Jenny Kutner

MORE FROM Jenny Kutner