A Libertarian Wrings His Hands Because AI Porn Might Get Too Good
Glenn Reynolds is a majpr symptom of the curruption and stupidity of our publishing industry, both print and online. Reynolds, a prominent libertarian, is a quack who apparently doesn't even understand Libertarianism 101. In February, I posted on a recent piece in which he decries the danger of AI sex bots becoming so seductive that they'll convince their patrons, say, to change their wills and leave their estates to their imaginary sex bot companions.
But this is nothing new -- like anything else, AI just makes same-old same-old faster and cheaper. For instance, in 2019, Florida man Grant Amato was convicted of killing his parents and brother to continue financing his obsession with a Bulgarian webcam model. He stole roughly $200,000 from his family to pay for webcam services.
No AI needed, but now they can lay off the live webcam babes, AI will do it better without them. But where was Glenn Reynolds? If a webcam site could get a mark to ante up $200,000 then, why wasn't he arguing for regulation of web sex when that happened? Oh, right, wait a moment, Reynolds is a prominent libertarian, and libertarians are against regulating sex work:
Libertarians believe that the private sexual choices of consenting adults should not be criminalized nor subject to public policy, and this does not change when payment is involved.
That's at Libertarians.org. But Reynolds has a new book, and the mainstream media is helping him hype his message, for instance in The New York Post on Friday:
[P]ofessor Glenn Harlan Reynolds argues the biggest threat posed by AI will be its seductive capabilities.
“You don’t have to have a 12,000 IQ or a 1,200 IQ or even 120 IQ to fool most human beings,” Reynolds told The Post.
Yeah, he should know, I'd put him in the 120 range. But the piece goes on,
In his new book “Seductive AI,” to be published May 5 by Encounter Books, the University of Tennessee law professor argues that AI can accomplish “soft oppression” through seduction — flattering us, telling us what we want to hear, and playing on our instincts to nudge us towards certain opinions or special interests.
. . . He has a proposed legal solution to the seductive nature of AI.
Like any lawyer or financial advisor, it should have a fiduciary responsibility to users — or, put more simply, “it has to put your interests above the interests of the AI or its creators.”
“The advice it offers should be based on my interests, and not on some algorithm that’s designed to push me in a particular direction,” the law prof explained.
“If my AI girlfriend is constantly telling me that I would look really good in a pair of expensive shoes made by somebody who is paying the company to have it tell me that, that’s a violation of fiduciary duty.”
Well, hey, that's great! But if the AI sex bot violates its fiduciary duty, what can I do?
Breaching fiduciary duty can lead to significant penalties, impacting both financial advisors and their clients. Fiduciary duty mandates advisors to act in the best interest of their clients, and violations can result in severe legal and financial repercussions. Penalties for breach of fiduciary duty include hefty fines, restitution payments and potential imprisonment.
Er, wait a moment. Doesn't this mean a whole new body of AI sex bot law, requiring all sorts of legal and ethical regulations for what amounts to porn? But just above, we saw Libertarians.org tell us the private sexual choices of consenting adults should not be criminalized or subject to public policy, except now prominent libertarian Glenn Reynolds is tellimg us AI porn is apparently different, and we've gotta public policy the heck out of it. In other words, he's proposing a Consumer AI Sex Bot Regulatory Commision, and I'll bet he's already got his name in as its first commissioner.But what's the differemce between live webcam girls and phone sex providers on one hand, and AI sex bots on the other? I asked Chrome AI mode, "What is the libertarian position on webcam girls?" It answered,
The libertarian position on webcam girls is rooted in the principles of individual self-ownership, voluntary exchange, and freedom of expression. Libertarians generally view webcamming as a legitimate form of entrepreneurship and labor that should be free from government interference.
. . . Libertarians assert that individuals own their bodies and have the absolute right to decide how to use them, including providing sexual services or entertainment for compensation.
But what if I'm a really good AI programmer, and I choose to use my personal skills to get AI to make a really, really skilled and tasteful AI sex bot that will convince any client to buy a defective car from a dealership I own, or even write his family out of his will in favor of my AI sex bot? Wouldn't libertarians say that's nobody else's business, or at least not worth trying to regulate the industry? For instance, what about the Grant Amato case I mentioned above, where Amato murdered his family so he could continue to pay a webcam girl. Chrome AI mode told me:
Libertarians universally condemn murder as the most extreme violation of the Non-Aggression Principle (NAP). While libertarianism has distinct and sometimes controversial views on family dynamics, property rights, and victimless crimes, these principles provide a clear framework for analyzing cases like that of Grant Amato. . . . From a libertarian standpoint, Amato’s motive -- wanting to pay a webcam girl -— is irrelevant to the illegality of the act. No amount of emotional distress or "need" justifies the use of lethal force against non-aggressive parties.
In other words, leave the webcam girl out of it, this is a murder case. But then, why does Reynolds want somehow to bring an AI sex bot into cases that ought to be just fraud or alienation of affection, especially if they would otherwise just involve human webcam or phone sex girls? So far, Reynolds hasn't explained whatever difference he sees, but in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, clearly planted with the Journal's corrupt connivance to hype his new book, he gives a suggestion:
Computers that manipulate people by drawing on human tendencies already exist. Soon they will be more common and more powerful, producing what I call “Seductive AI.”
. . . You and your AI buddy would share inside jokes, light teasing, “remember when” stories of things you did in the past and fantasies or plans for the future. It would be like a best friend who’s always there for you and endlessly helpful.
. . . My concern is that the platforms’ owners will use them to manipulate their users in self-interested ways, encouraging purchases, investments and other behaviors for their own purposes, or inflict political spin even as users think they’re having authentic interaction[.]
So apparently he more or less acknowledges a human webcam or phone sex girl can be seductive and fully capable of all kinds of mulct, but AI would be worse, so much worse that we need to regulate it, which he says straight out:
There have been some suggestions for regulation already, but here’s mine: AI personalities and their owners should be subjected to fiduciary duty when they interact with users.
In other words, he's proposing a Consumer AI Sex Bot Regulatory Commision. He's proposing it on the basis that a so-called reasonable person lacks the basic judgment to recognize that an AI sex bot that he chooses to interact with may not have his best interests in mind. But how does this differ from the basic judgment we expect of anyone who, say, meets a stranger in a bar? How does this differ from the basic judgment we expect of someone who reads an op-ed in a paper?We don't try to regulate the pickup lines people use in a bar. We don't try to regulate newspaper op-eds because some people might find them misleading. But now Reynolds wants to regulate what is basically just a form of entertainment -- AI sex bots -- when he (at least presumably) would never advocate regulating, say, ordinary internet porn. What's the difference? Apparently the difference is that AI sex bots would be "better" than live webcam or phone sex girls.
But live webcam girls are already good enough to get guys to murder their families. My guess is that there's a basic number of guys whose judgment is poor enough that webcam girls can get them to do anything. Does Reynolds worry that AI will lower the bar, and it will pull in smarter guys with better judgment? Like maybe Reynolds himself, who is at least slightly smarter, with slightly better judgment -- maybe?This seems to be a recent photo of the great man himself, complete with cheesy smile and $279 toupee. Let's recall that this is a guy who has a contract to have his head frozen when he dies so they can fix what killed him and bring him back when science has advanced that far. I guess if my mind worked like his, I'd worry about what an AI sex bot could make me do as well.




