Experts predict that women will have more sex with robots than men next year


Next year could be the year of the robot lover.

When Many are afraid of automation in the workplacesome futurists predict that machines will take over our love lives by 2025.

This new year is the day when futurist Dr Ian Pearson hoped that people would ‘start to see some kind of robot sex showing up in the richest, richest families.’

And a PhD in physics and mathematics, who boasted an 85 percent accuracy rate for his predictions, disagrees. women can take over men by using sex robots by 2025 – in part, because they have a technological head start.

‘Vibrators have been around for over a hundred years,’ Dr Pearson said, ‘but now the fast-paced sex industry is not only producing stand-up devices, but teledildonic devices that bring all the excitement and functionality of computers and networks to sex too.’

First born in 1975, ‘teledildonics’ has become the technology of robotic toys that operate remotely, either via the Internet or elsewhere.

According to a survey, about 63 percent of women admit that they already use or want to use a sex toy. 40 percent agree that virtual reality can make sex more fun and enjoyable.

Although the market for human-like sexbots, which can fetch upwards of $15,000, is often thought to be male-dominated, some experts have suggested that gender stereotypes need to change.

“I think it’s men who should be worried,” Harvard-educated mathematician Dr Cathy O’Neil said. ‘It is quite possible robots he can surpass them.’

Women may overtake men in adoption of sex robots by 2025 - in part, because they have a head start: 'Vibrators have been around for over a century,' said one expert.

Women may overtake men in adoption of sex robots by 2025 – in part, because they have a head start: ‘Vibrators have been around for over a century,’ said one expert.

Delaware-based company Realbotix introduced a female sexbot in 2018 called 'Henry' (above). Operated via an app, the $11,000 companion promised comedy, 'adult sounds' and 'superhuman sex' - with extras that would bring the price up to $15,600.

Delaware-based company Realbotix introduced a female sexbot in 2018 called ‘Henry’ (above). Operated via an app, the $11,000 companion promised comedy, ‘adult sounds’ and ‘superhuman sex’ – with extras that would bring the price up to $15,600.

‘In the age of #MeToo, I feel that raising standards is necessary,’ Dr O’Neil wrote in 2018 Bloomberg op-ed. ‘It’s called, actually.’

According to some industry research, women and men are already approaching parity in the use of sex toys, meaning that this trend may be imminent.

Dr Ian Person’s sex predictions

  • By 2025, women may outpace men in adopting sex robots
  • By 2030, most people will have had real sex
  • By 2035, sex toys will have matured and real sex will be the norm
  • By 2050, sex with robots will overtake sex with other people

Although only 17.4 percent of people said they had sex with a robot at all, according to which is collected by Bedbible for 2024, the difference between men and women reached 17.8 percent for men and 16.5 percent for women.

But according to Dr Pearson, economics may prevent mass adoption in the near future.

“While some people will eagerly embrace relationshipless robot sex once they can afford it, starting in 2025, there won’t be much chance of human sex until 2050,” the futurist wrote. his most important studies in Bondara.

The change will start with real sex, which ‘many people’ will have by 2030, partly due to the rise of connected devices, and the nature of work and remote relationships, argued in a 2015 report commissioned by the UK’s largest toy retailer.

‘Swho can use straight VR without sex toys as part of it, “he predicted. ‘By the year 2035 toys will be perfected and many people will be well used to VR sex by then, so they will have found sex toys that connect with VR.’

‘Most people will still be skeptical about sex with robots,’ but by 25 years from 2025, Dr Pearson predicts humanity. ‘the flood will gradually evaporate.’

Science fiction and popular culture tend to think that the market for sex robots will be driven by the desires of men - as seen in the 2014 film 'Ex Machina' (pictured above).

Science fiction and popular culture tend to think that the market for sex robots will be driven by the desires of men – as seen in the 2014 film ‘Ex Machina’ (pictured above).

Technological progress will help build consumer comfort with robot sex partners in decades, according to Dr Pearson, ‘as AI (artificial intelligence) and machine behavior and their feelings become better, and they begin to become friends and strong emotional relationships.’

‘You can buy robots now. They’re not very good,” Pearson said Different in 2015. ‘They really fall short of the ideal sex robot.’

“It’s a small market today, and it will be a small market in 2025,” he predicted.

And, in fact, Bedbible reports that in a country of billions of people, only 156 sex robots will be sold every day in 2024.

The The $201 million sex toy industry, they found, accounts for just 0.5 percent of the $37 billion global sex toy industry each year.

Dr Pearson, however, admitted that he is not wrong: In 2020, before ‘.happily he breathed,’ Dr Pearson admitted to CNN his predictions of hyper-advance, full awareness and emotional AI were off by decades, if not more.

“It didn’t progress as quickly as I thought it would,” Pearson said CNN. ‘AI was developing very rapidly at the turn of the century, so we had predictions that by 2015 we would have cognitive machines that were smarter than humans.’

“I would estimate that AI has progressed 35 or 40 percent faster than we expected,” he admitted.

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