Justinify
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Justinify
@TheJustinify
AI & Tech enthusiast exploring breakthroughs with curiosity, humor, and positivity.
Tham gia Ağustos 2024
160 Đang theo dõi199 Người theo dõi

Humanoid Robots Will Make Human Sex Obsolete
Humanoid robots won’t just supplement human sexuality, they’ll completely rewire it. When machines reach the point of lifelike touch, adaptive personalities, and AI-driven emotional feedback, human desire will bend around them like water finds new channels. Sex will stop being only about human-to-human intimacy, it’ll become a playground of programmable fantasies.
That means two things:
1.Relationships get disrupted. If a robot can be endlessly attentive, responsive, safe, and customizable, some people will prefer that over messy, unpredictable human partners. Monogamy, dating, even traditional family structures could start to fracture under the weight of perfect synthetic companionship.
2.Sex itself becomes an evolving medium. Once robots can offer things beyond human biology, modular bodies, morphing appearances, non-stop stamina, sensations engineered to trigger brain chemistry in new ways, our definition of pleasure could expand into realms that current humans can’t even conceptualize. Think of it like going from campfire stories to the internet: we won’t go back.
The real controversy is not just about replacing partners. It’s about outcompeting evolution. Sexual attraction has always been shaped by survival and reproduction, but robots won’t need either. Desire will detach from reproduction completely, and society will have to wrestle with what intimacy means when sex is no longer tied to our biological imperatives.
Future generations might look back at our idea of “romance” the same way we look at medieval bloodletting, an outdated ritual, superseded by technology that can do it better.
The uncomfortable question is whether this will liberate us… or hollow us out.

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We’re beginning to roll out parental controls in ChatGPT, including the first-of-its-kind safety notification system to alert parents if their teen may be at risk of self-harm. Read more here: openai.com/index/introduc…
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Meta’s new AI glasses are seriously impressive
I think many are curious what will replace the smartphone
Smart glasses albeit cool, don’t feel like a smartphone replacement more like an accessory you occasionally wear - and possibly throw in your closet after a few wears
I’m excited for true innovation in tech as it feels lackluster lately
Sorry for the thought salad
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@ai_for_success in what ways can hardware be AI, AI is based on software, correct?
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I imagine Apple is cooking up something very special in the world of AI.
They could release something with the iPhone launch to show they can still lead in the world of innovation.
For starters amplifying Siri with more functionality would be great to see.
I just imagine a day where you tell siri your idea and it generates you a personalized application. Or it automatically suggests application ideas based on how you use your phone.
I’m not sure about you all but after years of being an iPhone user the number of apps gets a bit messy - and there’s no automatic way to sort them into folders, why?
Come on Apple. Shock the world.
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ChatGPT-5 recommended a nail place with mani and pedi for $25-$30 - seemed too good to be true.
I followed the link. The source? A 2016 article quoting those prices.
That got me thinking: an intelligent person would look at the date and be like "Wow, that's 10 years ago. There's no way this price still exists."
But why doesn't AI ? 🧐
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@OpenAI I appreciate the hiccups during the live - really shows all energy and effort is going into the end product vs. the live performance - though would love to see an Apple-like announcement in the future.
GPT-5 looks great and can't wait to get my hands on it. Great work.
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@ai_for_success It's starting to become clear that workforce displacement is still a ways off
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Sam Altman : GPT-5 is the smartest thing, it's smarter than us in almost every way.
OpenAI : 318 open jobs 😂
Something is not matching.
h/t misaligned_agi

AshutoshShrivastava@ai_for_success
No one does marketing better than Sam Altman. GPT-5 is the smartest thing. It’s smarter than us in almost every way. And yet… here we are. I genuinely hope it lives up to the hype.
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Maybe some of the most mundane or repetitive jobs, sure. But most roles are tied to overly complex systems and messy workflows. I've worked at several tech companies and seen firsthand how slow orgs are to change anything deeply embedded.
I think AI will definitely impact jobs over the next 10 years, but even today there’s a lot it can’t do. And many companies aren't ready to hand over tasks to agents - especially with the risks and uncertainty around how they could be misused. There’s still a lot to figure out.
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@sama Maybe enable 2fa before it makes any changes or releases personal info for any reason.
This will be very important as Agent connects to more tools like CRMs. But CRM connection is 100% necessary for this tool for real impact. That is until you all can create an AIO business tool
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Today we launched a new product called ChatGPT Agent.
Agent represents a new level of capability for AI systems and can accomplish some remarkable, complex tasks for you using its own computer. It combines the spirit of Deep Research and Operator, but is more powerful than that may sound—it can think for a long time, use some tools, think some more, take some actions, think some more, etc. For example, we showed a demo in our launch of preparing for a friend’s wedding: buying an outfit, booking travel, choosing a gift, etc. We also showed an example of analyzing data and creating a presentation for work.
Although the utility is significant, so are the potential risks.
We have built a lot of safeguards and warnings into it, and broader mitigations than we’ve ever developed before from robust training to system safeguards to user controls, but we can’t anticipate everything. In the spirit of iterative deployment, we are going to warn users heavily and give users freedom to take actions carefully if they want to.
I would explain this to my own family as cutting edge and experimental; a chance to try the future, but not something I’d yet use for high-stakes uses or with a lot of personal information until we have a chance to study and improve it in the wild.
We don’t know exactly what the impacts are going to be, but bad actors may try to “trick” users’ AI agents into giving private information they shouldn’t and take actions they shouldn’t, in ways we can’t predict. We recommend giving agents the minimum access required to complete a task to reduce privacy and security risks.
For example, I can give Agent access to my calendar to find a time that works for a group dinner. But I don’t need to give it any access if I’m just asking it to buy me some clothes.
There is more risk in tasks like “Look at my emails that came in overnight and do whatever you need to do to address them, don’t ask any follow up questions”. This could lead to untrusted content from a malicious email tricking the model into leaking your data.
We think it’s important to begin learning from contact with reality, and that people adopt these tools carefully and slowly as we better quantify and mitigate the potential risks involved. As with other new levels of capability, society, the technology, and the risk mitigation strategy will need to co-evolve.
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