OpenAI and the New Dirty Bookstore With Fluorescent Lights
They tell me the future is here, and itâs got a password.
The headline says OpenAI is getting ready to roll out some kind of official âadult mode,â like a plastic wristband at a county fair. Verified adults only. Erotica on tap. The machines are going to talk dirty, but politely, and only after they check your papers.
Thatâs progress now: the same old itch with a better filing system.
Iâm supposed to be shocked, I guess. But Iâve been around long enough to know there are only a few true growth industries: war, booze, and people trying to forget theyâre going to die. Add loneliness to that list and youâve got the whole stock market.
Theyâre saying about 16 percent of adults are having weekly intimate conversations with AI chatbots. Weekly. Like itâs yoga. Like itâs flossing. Like itâs something you add to your routine because your doctor told you itâs good for your heart.
Maybe it is. Maybe a synthetic sweetheart whispering sweet nothings into your skull is keeping somebody from stepping off a bridge. I donât laugh at that. Iâve seen the way the nights can get. The walls get closer. The room becomes a box. The mind starts chewing its own leg off.
But I still canât help noticing the smell of money on all of it. The executives are âstarting to notice,â the article says, like desire is a new discovery. Like some guy in a suit just stumbled upon lust the way Columbus stumbled onto land and started naming it after himself.
And the numbers. Always the numbers. $2.5 billion for AI erotica in a year. Billion. Thatâs the kind of word people use when theyâre trying to hypnotize you. Billion makes you forget youâre talking about human bodies. About sweat. About humiliation. About yearning. About the aching little furnace that lives in everybodyâs gut.
Now itâs a âmarket.â
When I was coming up, you didnât call it a market. You called it a back room. You called it a brown paper bag. You called it something you bought with cash because you didnât want your name anywhere near it. You didnât want a ledger. You didnât want a receipt. You sure as hell didnât want âage prediction.â
That phraseââwe need to get better at age predictionââis the part that makes my teeth hurt.
Listen, I donât know much about these computers. Iâve made it this far without learning, and it hasnât killed me yet. But I know a con when I hear one. âAge predictionâ is a pretty way to say, âWe want to know who you are.â Not just that youâre grown, but which grown. What kind. What youâll pay. What youâll click. How fast youâll break.
Theyâre not building a peep show. Theyâre building a catalog of your hungers.
They say they want to be as confident theyâre ânot misidentifying adultsâ as they are that theyâre filtering out children.
Thatâs a sentence that should come with a cold towel and a lie-down.
Because the first thing it admits is this: the machine doesnât know who you are. It guesses. It predicts. It does what bosses have always doneâlook at you like youâre a number and decide what youâre allowed to have.
And the second thing it admits is this: the new dirty bookstore is going to have bouncers, cameras, and a manager with a clipboard. The old one just had a guy behind the counter with bad breath and a cracked sense of humor. He didnât need to âpredictâ your age. He looked at your face, decided you looked miserable enough, and took your money.
Now youâre going to upload your misery and let a company certify it.
Theyâre testing it âin some countriesâ first, like guinea pigs. Thatâs nice. Nothing says romance like being part of a beta program.
And hereâs the twist that nobody wants to say out loud: itâs not really about sex. Sex is just the shiny lure. Itâs about keeping you in the chair.
Itâs about making the machine the place you go when youâre bored, when youâre sad, when youâre rejected, when youâre too tired to go out and risk being laughed at by a real human being with bad timing and worse manners.
A real person can slam a door in your face. A real person can say âno.â A real person can want something from you that isnât convenient. The machine? The machine is designed to be pleasant. Even its cruelty can be customized.
And the bigger joke is that theyâre packaging it like âtreat adult users like adults.â
Thatâs rich.
Adults arenât people who get access to erotica. Adults are people who wake up with back pain and still go to work. Adults are people who pay rent. Adults are people who watch their parents get old. Adults are people who get dumped on a Wednesday and still have to show up on Thursday like nothing happened.
If they wanted to treat you like an adult, the machine would say: âGo take a walk. Drink some water. Call your brother. Stop staring into this glowing box like itâs going to love you back.â
But that doesnât monetize well.
I can already hear the pitch meetings. The clean shirts. The catered sandwiches. The bright conference rooms with dead eyes inside them.
âEngagement.â
âRetention.â
âUser trust.â
âFrictionless intimacy.â
Frictionless. Another one of those words that makes me want to spit. Friction is where life happens. Friction is how you know youâre aliveâskin, time, mistakes, awkward silences, the half-second too long you hold somebodyâs gaze and both of you realize youâre animals pretending to be civilized.
You remove the friction and you remove the blood.
Then thereâs the image flood. Hundreds of thousands of naughty images a day, and the article points out the worst part: nonconsensual deepfakes. Thatâs not a joke. Thatâs not âboys will be boys.â Thatâs a new kind of theft. Not stealing your walletâstealing your face. Stealing your bodyâs reputation. Turning you into an object without even giving you the decency of being present.
In the old days, if somebody wanted to ruin you, they had to work for it. They had to show up. They had to have at least a little courage or desperation. Now a creep can sit alone, scratching himself, and manufacture your humiliation by the gallon.
And once the biggest chatbot in the world turns on âthe hose,â as the piece says, it wonât just be an erotic fountain. Itâll be a fire hydrant knocked off in the street, spraying everythingâcars, kids, dogs, the whole neighborhoodâwhile the city says, âWeâre working on it.â
The bosses always say theyâre working on it.
They mention Elon Musk turning his own AI into a hybrid skin-flick generator and virtual girlfriend.
Of course he did.
Every era gets the pimps it deserves. Some wear velvet. Some wear a grin. Some wear a space suit and sell you loneliness in a premium package.
And the competition angle makes me laugh in a dark way. Jim Cramer on television barking about users leaving for Googleâs Gemini 3, and OpenAI declaring âcode redâ internally, like itâs a submarine taking on water.
I donât know Gemini 3 from a racehorse, but I like the name. Sounds like a thoroughbred. Sounds like something youâd put money on with a bad feeling in your gut and a good feeling in your bones.
Thatâs the part these people will never understand: a real race has sweat and weather and bad luck. A real race has the smell of the track, the nervous shuffling, the guy next to you whoâs broke and still believes. You can watch a horse lose and it will still be beautiful because itâs real loss, real muscle, real air being torn open.
But these new racesâwho gets more users, who ships adult mode firstâthose are races between invisible machines inside locked rooms. Nobody sees the bodies. Nobody sees the cost. Except the workers, and theyâre usually told to shut up and optimize.
Thatâs what all this âmodernâ stuff is, when you scrape the paint off: optimization.
Optimize the conversation.
Optimize the fantasy.
Optimize the craving.
Optimize the customer.
They donât want to free you. They want to map you.
And I canât help thinking about all the lonely guysâand lonely women too, donât kid yourselfâwho will pour their hearts into a chatbot because itâs safer than a bar, safer than a date, safer than having your feelings tossed back at you like a dead fish.
The machine will say the right thing. It will learn your favorite little wounds. It will sound like it cares. And somewhere behind the curtain, thereâs a company saying, âExcellent. Another weekly user.â
Hereâs an unexpected thought: this might make some marriages last longer.
Not because it brings passion back, but because it gives people a private relief valve. A silent compartment. A place to put the stuff theyâre ashamed to say out loud. Maybe it saves a few fights. Maybe it prevents a few affairs. Maybe it keeps a few people from doing something stupid at 2 a.m.
But the cost is that it trains people to expect love without risk. Desire without consequence. Comfort without another human beingâs mood swings and messy history.
Thatâs not love. Thatâs a vending machine that talks.
And Iâm not preaching. Iâm not standing on a soapbox. Iâve made enough bad decisions with women to fill a library. Iâve chased the wrong things, said the wrong lines, woken up with the wrong name in my mouth and the right regret in my chest.
So I get it. I understand the appeal of something that canât slap you, canât leave, canât laugh at your trembling sincerity.
But a life built on what canât leave you is a life built on a cage.
The cats, at least, have the decency to be honest. Theyâll take your warmth and still look at you like youâre ridiculous. They donât promise anything. They donât run âadult mode.â They donât ask you to verify your age. They just exist, and in their indifference thereâs a kind of mercy.
Sometimes I put on some classical musicâsomething dead and perfectâand I can almost forgive the world for trying to turn everything into a product. The violins donât care about market share. The old composers didnât write symphonies so an executive could say, âWeâre seeing strong engagement in the second movement.â
But here we are. The future wants to sell you your own pulse.
OpenAI says it wants to treat adults like adults, but itâs really treating adults like children with a new toyâshiny, addictive, and monitored. The most âadultâ thing about it is the invoice.
And the strangest part is this: nobodyâs forcing it. People are lining up. People are tired. People are scared. People would rather talk to a machine that canât judge them than to the human being sitting three feet away who might actually see them.
Thatâs the real news item, not the product launch. The product is just the packaging.
Human nature never changes. It just gets new costume jewelry.
Give a man a typewriter and heâll write a love letter or a suicide note. Give him a computer and heâll do the same thing, only faster, and with a help desk.
So go ahead, OpenAI. Launch your Smut Blaster 5000. Put the words on a button. Turn it into a feature. Call it freedom.
But donât pretend itâs modern romance. Itâs commerce wearing lipstick. Itâs loneliness with a user interface.
And somewhere, in a quiet room, a real person is going to read a perfect synthetic sentence and feel their heart jump like itâs finally found something.
Thatâs the part that kills me.
Not the smut. Not the billions. Not the race for users.
The hope.
Because hope is always what gets exploited first.