Is sex and robots the next logical step in human machine interaction and if so what are the risks associated with such action and what are the implications for human relations?

A UK event in Manchester will this week discuss “Technology and Intimacy: Choice or Coercion?”at the 12th IFIP TC9 Human Choice and Computers (HCC12) conference at MediaCityUK in Salford.

Discussions will cover topics ranging from data safety and trust to sexual interaction with machnies being the next logical interaction as trends such as people's engagement with social media, global access to porn and the sharing intimate details online converge.

The conference claims to be the first to explore how technology is influencing the ways in which humans create and express intimacy.

It will feature a keynote by Professor Charles Ess from the University of Oslo on: “What’s love got to do with it?  Robots, sexuality, and the art of being human”.

IFIP TC9 is the group focused on ICT and Society within IFIP, the global professional association for the ICT sector.

HCC12 Program Committee Chair, Dr David Kreps of Salford University, said the event will consider the latest research and theories about how humans engage with robots, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other forms of technology to explore issues of intimacy and sexuality.

There are strong arguments on both sides. David Levy’s 2008 book, “Love and Sex with Robots” suggests that humans will fall in love with and even marry social robots in the not too distant future.  

Robotics ethicist, Kathleen Richardson, is campaigning to ban sex robots because she believes these kinds of robots are potentially harmful and will contribute to inequalities in society.

“Increasingly, we can wear technology to monitor our health or enhance access to information, we engage with social media in a highly personal nature and can even implant technology devices in our bodies to track movement or communicate. Sex robots are simply another way in which technology is being developed to enhance pleasure,” Dr Krebs said.

Ghislane Boddington, Co-Founder and Creative Director at body data space, is presenting a keynote on what she calls “The Internet of Bodies”. Ms Boddington sees this interlinking of bodies, information on our movements and senses to technology and the robots or avatars we choose to create, as being the future of love and intimacy.

According to Dr Kreps, “A key consideration with all these more intimate applications of technology is that humans understand the implications of their involvement, such as who might access or use the data being collected about them from wearable devices, and have given their consent for that.”

He said many people today share intimate details of their lives on social media or post video of themselves on dating sites. “The kind of chatter that used to be shared just with close friends or family is now being harvested online by global corporations and used to target us with advertising – that’s the level of intimacy that technology has established.

“Add to that the global availability of online porn and the use of social media and dating sites to make connections and engage in sexual discourse, and it’s clear that technology is both enabling and shaping new forms of intimacy and sexual expression. And those are definitely issues worth discussing,” he said.

For more information about HCC12 

Picture shows an image from Ex-Machina, an Oscar winning movie about Artificial Intelligence and Human interaction