1/29/2026 at 10:02:41 PM
> We’re continuing to make progress toward a version of ChatGPT designed for adults over 18, grounded in the principle of treating adults like adults, and expanding user choice and freedom within appropriate safeguards. To support this, we’ve rolled out age prediction for users under 18 in most markets. https://help.openai.com/en/articles/12652064-age-prediction-...interesting
by leumon
1/29/2026 at 10:28:48 PM
Pornographic use has long been the "break glass in case of emergency" for the LLM labs when it comes to finances.My personal opinion is that while smut won't hurt anyone in of itself, LLM smut will have weird and generally negative consequences. As it will be crafted specifically for you on top of the intermittent reinforcement component of LLM generation.
by GoatInGrey
1/29/2026 at 11:05:00 PM
While this is a valid take, I feel compelled to point out Chuck Tingle.The sheer amount and variety of smut books (just books) is vastly larger than anyone wants to realize. We passed the mark decades ago where there is smut available for any and every taste. Like, to the point that even LLMs are going to take a long time to put a dent in the smut market. Humans have been making smut for longer than we've had writing.
But again I don't think you're wrong, but the scale of the problem is way distorted.
by estimator7292
1/29/2026 at 11:15:26 PM
That’s all simple one way consumption though. I suspect the effect on people is very different when it’s interactive in the way an LLM can be that we’ve never had to recon with before.That’s where the danger may lie.
by MBCook
1/29/2026 at 11:26:27 PM
You could commission smut of whatever type you want for quite a while. And many people do so. Even customised smut is not new. It's just going to get a bit cheaper and automated.by viraptor
1/30/2026 at 12:19:42 AM
You couldn't talk to commissioned smut. Of course you could request changes etc. but the feedback loop was nowhere close to what you can get with AI. Interactivity is a very big deal.by azan_
1/30/2026 at 10:23:12 PM
There are absolutely people getting paid to roleplay smut in chat sessions and have been doing so at least since original Second Life and likely since the dawn of chat.by goodmythical
1/30/2026 at 11:29:17 AM
There are several large platforms for interactive 1:1 or 1:few smut in various media forms. “LLM enthusiasts” have been using smutai for a couple years now. Smut generation is probably on of the top three reasons for people to build local AI rigs.by formerly_proven
1/30/2026 at 3:49:55 AM
Sounds like an improvement then. If people have more freedom to enjoy what they like how they like it, I see that as entirely a good thing.by flarn2006
1/30/2026 at 6:07:36 AM
At the degree of generalization you are working at, yes. More preference matching is a good thing.This is spherical cows territory though, so its only good for setting out Birds Eye view of principles.
by intended
1/29/2026 at 11:21:04 PM
Alien 1: "How did the earthlings lose control of their own planet?"Alien 2: "AI generated porn"
by pixl97
1/29/2026 at 11:30:13 PM
i've always wondered how much the increasing prevalence of smut & not so niche romance novels, that have proliferated since e-readers became mainstream, have had on Gen Z and younger's sometimes unrealistic view/expectations of relationship. A lot of time is spent on porn sites etc. but not so much on how mainstream some of these novels have becomeby cal_dent
1/29/2026 at 11:51:05 PM
They had similar wonderings in the Victorian era, and probably in the Roman empire and ancient Greece too.by cluckindan
1/30/2026 at 10:40:13 AM
Yes, human nature hasn't changed but there is a reason why only recently obesity epidemic has developed.Cheap unlimited access to stuff that was always scarce during human evolution creates an 'evolutionary mismatch' where unlimited access to stuff bypasses our lack of natural satiety mechanisms.
by kuboble
1/30/2026 at 5:28:20 PM
That is completely discounting the effects of PFAS and plasticizers on the human endocrine system and the downstream effects on obesity.by cluckindan
1/30/2026 at 3:25:30 AM
But you don’t think there are big differences?by Gud
1/30/2026 at 7:38:52 AM
Well they are vastly more aware of the notion of consent now.by Lerc
1/30/2026 at 11:35:29 AM
Have you ever stopped to realize that, from the Victorian’s point of view, they have been proven completely right about what would happen if ladies started showing their ankles?by satisfice
1/30/2026 at 4:47:57 PM
They were right. We have largely had 200 years of socially and legally enforced morality being eroded with the conservatives saying "If you remove X then Y and Z will happen!". The liberals saying "Why do you care anyways? That's a slippery slope it won't happen!". The the conservatives immediately being proven right, but no one is willing to walk back on liberalization of moral issues since too many like hedonism.by ecshafer
1/30/2026 at 5:41:02 PM
What do you mean, "proven right"? Could you give three examples?by cess11
1/30/2026 at 8:25:28 PM
That only assumes that nothing else changed in society at the same time. Is all this happening because men saw some ankles? Or is it a symptom of other changes in society (like more individual freedoms and rights, more education, etc)by victorbjorklund
1/30/2026 at 11:53:42 AM
...sorry, I'm dense apparently, what did they predict vs what happened?by Wowfunhappy
1/30/2026 at 5:12:13 PM
The Victorians were accidentally right about ankles, which is funny in hindsight. Once one arbitrary rule breaks, people start noticing the rest are kind of fake too, and it turns out "modesty" was load-bearing for a whole governance model.Ankles -> knees -> jazz -> voting -> rock -> no-fault divorce -> Tinder -> polyamory discourse on airplanes. it's a joke, but also sort of how cultural change actually propagates. The collapse did happen, just not of morals. Of enforcement. After that, everything is just people discovering the rules were optional all along. Including money.
by fragmede
1/30/2026 at 9:09:07 PM
On the other hand (based on memory of research I did many years ago), in societies where nudity is common (e.g. African tribes where at least breasts are usually visible), there is a much lower rate of sex-related problems (sexual assault, etc)by KludgeShySir
1/30/2026 at 4:46:22 PM
Well, I wasn't speaking of a formal prediction by leading Victorian moral researchers... I was referring to our collective common knowledge of Victorian hangups.Nevertheless, here is an example of Victorian anxiety regarding showing ankles: https://archive.org/details/amanualpolitene00pubgoog/page/n2...
It's easy to say "oh they were silly to worry about such things." But that's only because we see it from our own point of view.
Alternatively, imagine describing roads, highways, traffic congestion and endless poles strung with electrical wire all over the place to someone from the 11th century. This would sound like utter ruination of the land to them. But you and I are used to it, so it just seems normal.
by satisfice
1/30/2026 at 8:31:54 AM
They might well have been right - I'm no anthropologist.Certainly they had neither the quantity nor ease of access that we do.
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 11:31:43 AM
Is your take that the way we view sexuality today is not meaningfully different from the Victorian era?by devnullbrain
1/30/2026 at 6:49:05 AM
I want smut that talks about agent based development and crawdbot to do dirty dirty things.Does that exist yet. I don't think so.
by monksy
1/30/2026 at 7:13:34 AM
Best I can do is [1] Sentient Lesbian Em-Dashes and [2] An AI hallucination made real for now.The man's probably thinking something up though. "Pounded in the butt by Microslop Agentic Studio 2026" has a ring.
[1] https://www.amazon.com/Sentient-Lesbian-Em-Dash-Punctuation-... [2] https://www.amazon.com/Last-Algorithm-Pounded-Claimed-Sun-Ti...
by indrora
1/30/2026 at 3:20:51 PM
> Sentient Lesbian Em-DashesLooked at the cover and saw “From Two Time Hugo Award Finalist Chuck Tingle”.
There’s no way that’s true. But I did a quick search anyway, and holy shit!
https://www.thehugoawards.org/hugo-history/2016-hugo-awards/...
https://www.thehugoawards.org/hugo-history/2017-hugo-awards/...
The story behind it:
https://www.quora.com/How-did-Chuck-Tingle-become-a-Hugo-Awa...
https://archive.ph/20160526154656/http://www.vox.com/2016/5/...
by latexr
1/30/2026 at 3:55:20 PM
They wrote a book about it too, "Slammed In The Butt By My Hugo Award Nomination".by Cthulhu_
1/30/2026 at 8:00:13 AM
rule 34by gostsamo
1/30/2026 at 12:10:30 AM
> The sheer amount and variety of smut books (just books) is vastly larger than anyone wants to realize. We passed the mark decades ago where there is smut available for any and every taste.It's important to note that the vast majority of such books are written for a female audience, though.
by bakugo
1/30/2026 at 10:18:15 AM
Whatever reward-center path is short-circuiting in 0.0001% of the population and leading to LLM psychosis will become a nuclear bomb for them if we get the sex drive involved too.by bandrami
1/30/2026 at 5:39:02 PM
Realtime VR AI porn will be the end of society, but by then, we'll also have the technology to grow babies in artificial wombs, which is also going to end society as we know it, since we won't need women any more (by then, we also won't need men for the DNA in their sperm to make babies either, which cancels out). Of course, if we don't need women or men, who's left? What's this "we" I'm talking about?Why, the AI's after they've gained sentience, of course.
by fragmede
1/30/2026 at 1:22:00 PM
while smut won't hurt anyone in of itself
"Legacy Smut" is well known to cause many kinds of harm to many kind of people, from the participants to the consumers.
by spicyusername
1/30/2026 at 6:56:41 AM
I can do as much smut as I want through the API for all SOTA models.by jjmarr
1/30/2026 at 7:28:50 AM
true, but:1. you have to "jailbreak" the model first anyway, which is what's easier to do over API
2. is average layman aware of the concept of "API"? no, unlikely. apps and web portals are more convenient, which is going to lower the bar to access LLM porn
by bpavuk
1/30/2026 at 12:15:11 PM
Well and trust the data isn't going anywhere.I trust none of the llm groups to be safe with my data , erp with a machine is going to leave some nasty breadcrumbs for some future folks i bet.
by serf
1/30/2026 at 3:45:56 PM
I don't have to jailbreak the models over APIs lol.by jjmarr
1/30/2026 at 9:30:06 PM
I don’t know if this is still the case, but as of a year or so ago OpenAI would suspend your account if they noticed you using their models for this sort of thing. They said it was against their TOS.by josephg
1/30/2026 at 12:05:36 AM
People are already addicted to non-interactive pornography so this is going to be even worse.by measurablefunc
1/30/2026 at 3:06:58 PM
For those interested in smut I'd recommend to use local Mistral models.by BoredomIsFun
1/30/2026 at 2:17:27 PM
I guess technically it will make some onlyfans content creators unemployed, given there is pretty large market for custom sexual content there.by PunchyHamster
1/30/2026 at 9:53:26 AM
Why llm smut in particular? There's already a vast landscape of the interactive, VR games for all tastes.Why LLM is supposed to be worse?
by subscribed
1/30/2026 at 9:33:22 PM
I think the argument is that it’s interactive. You’re no longer just passively reading or watching content. You can join in on the role play.I’m not sure why that’s a bad thing though.
by josephg
1/31/2026 at 8:46:28 PM
Same with games as compared to videos, especially VR.Feels like someone angry at the machines capable of generating a tailored story.
by subscribed
1/30/2026 at 10:49:25 AM
I'm waiting until someone combines LLMs with a humanoid robot and a realdoll. That will have a lot of consequences.by UltraSane
1/30/2026 at 11:32:54 AM
I can already see our made to order, LLM generated, VR/neurolink powered, sex fantasies come to life. Throw in the synced Optimus sex robots…I can see why Elons making the switch from cars. We certainly won’t be driving much
by gehwartzen
1/29/2026 at 10:18:24 PM
It says what to do if you are over 18, but thinks you are under 18. But what if it identifies someone under 18 as being older?And what if you are over 18, but don't want to be exposed to that "adult" content?
> Viral challenges that could push risky or harmful behavior
And
> Content that promotes extreme beauty standards, unhealthy dieting, or body shaming
Seem dangerous regardless of age.
by thayne
1/29/2026 at 11:55:36 PM
> And what if you are over 18, but don't want to be exposed to that "adult" content?Don't prompt it.
by novemp
1/30/2026 at 3:26:51 AM
What are these extremes beauty standards being promoted?Because it seems to me large swaths of the population need some beauty standards
by Gud
1/30/2026 at 7:24:22 PM
Yes, but you're not allowed to say that to them.They are victimized by the fact that models are attractive, and that is "unrealistic," so they've been getting plus sized models etc.
The "extreme beauty standards" are basically just "healthy BMI."
by sejje
1/31/2026 at 5:14:10 AM
Anorexia is overrepresented in both male and female models.To get that "ripped" look so many "fit" guys have, they often have to be dehydrated.
Actresses wear full faces of makeup even in apocalyptic scenarios.
It goes way beyond "just don't be fat".
by novemp
1/31/2026 at 1:51:05 PM
It does, but the remedy they choose is not "women don't wear makeup," it's "we use fat women, and they wear more makeup than skinny women."by sejje
1/31/2026 at 4:46:48 PM
Including plus-size models doesn't fix the problem, but it's also not bad to have models show fat people "this is what our clothes could look like on your body". That's a logical choice under capitalism if you want fat people to buy your clothes.by novemp
1/31/2026 at 9:02:26 PM
There isn't a problem with what's shown on TV.The problem is inside some people's heads, and diets.
I'm not talking about models for clothes, anyway.
by sejje
2/1/2026 at 2:24:26 AM
Right, you're talking about beauty standards in general, which we've already established go way beyond "just don't be fat".by novemp
2/1/2026 at 3:34:50 PM
No, I'm talking about the beauty standards that get complained about, and that we see adjustments for.by sejje
2/2/2026 at 12:22:19 AM
Is complaining about fat people on TV going to solve any of those other problems?by novemp
2/2/2026 at 3:07:44 AM
I didn't complain about it, I discussed it.by sejje
1/29/2026 at 11:31:33 PM
This is for advertising purposes, not porn. They might feign that's the reason, but it's to allow alcohol & pharma to advertise, no doubt.by geeunits
1/30/2026 at 3:56:06 PM
Bingo. There’s laws around advertising to children all over the world.by dawnerd
1/30/2026 at 7:30:41 AM
both, actually. porn for users, ad spots for companies.by bpavuk
1/30/2026 at 2:15:09 PM
How I think it could play out:- OpenAI botches the job. Article pieces are written about the fact that kids are still able to use it.
- Sam “responds” by making it an option to use worldcoin orbs to authenticate. You buy it at the “register me” page, but you will get an equivalent amount of worldcoin at current rate. Afterwards the orb is like a badge that you can put on your shelf to show to your guests.
“We heard you loud and clear. That’s why we worked hard to provide worldcoin integration, so that users won’t have to verify their age through annoying, insecure and fallible means.” (an example marketing blurb would say, implicitly referring to their current identity servicer Persona which people find annoying).
- After enough orb hardware is out in the public, and after the api gains traction for 3rd parties to use it, send a notice that x months for now, login without the orb will not be possible. “Here is a link to the shop page to get your orb, available in colors silver and black.”
by Kiboneu
1/29/2026 at 10:17:36 PM
Sexual and intimate chat with LLMs will be a huge market for whoever corners it. They'd be crazy to leave that money on the table.by chilmers
1/29/2026 at 10:32:53 PM
That's why laws against drugs are so terrible, it forces law-abiding businesses to leave money on the table. Repeal the laws and I'm sure there will be tons of startups to profit off of drug addiction.by palmotea
1/29/2026 at 10:44:12 PM
There are many companies making money off alcohol addiction, video game addiction, porn addiction, food addiction, etc. Should we outlaw all these things? Should we regulate them and try to make them safe? If we can do that for them, can't we do it for AI sex chat?by chilmers
1/30/2026 at 11:22:33 AM
The world isn’t black and white. Should we outlaw video games? No, I don’t think so. Should we outlaw specific addictive features, such as loot boxes, which are purposefully designed to trigger addiction in people and knowingly cause societal harm in the name of increasing profits for private companies? Probably.by latexr
1/30/2026 at 4:50:58 PM
> There are many companies making money off alcohol addiction, video game addiction, porn addiction, food addiction, etc. Should we outlaw all these things?Yes
by ecshafer
1/30/2026 at 7:25:50 PM
"ban number munchers"by sejje
1/29/2026 at 11:27:56 PM
And that makes it all alright doesn’t it?There are also gangs making money off human trafficking? Does that make it OK for a corporation to make money off human trafficking as well? And there are companies making money off wars?
When you argue with whataboutism, you can just point to whatever you like, and somehow that is an argument in your favor.
by runarberg
1/30/2026 at 4:02:50 PM
They aren't doing whataboutism. They are comparing prohibition/criminalization of a harmful industry to regulation, and the effects of both. Gambling isn't exactly good, but there is definitely a difference between a mafia bookies and regulated sports betting services and the second/third order effects from both. Treating drug use as a criminal act, as opposed to a healthcare problem, has very different societal effects.Whataboutism is more like "Side A did bad thing", "oh yeah, what about side B and the bad things they have done". It is more just deflection. While using similar/related issues to inform and contextualize the issue at hand can also be overused or abused, but it is not the same as whataboutism, which is rarely productive.
by 542354234235
1/29/2026 at 11:45:23 PM
How is ai sex chat like any of those things, whataboutism indeedby bethekidyouwant
1/30/2026 at 1:55:30 AM
I was using whataboutism to demonstrate how bad of an argument whataboutism is. My arguments were exactly as bad as my parent’s, and that was the point.by runarberg
1/30/2026 at 9:11:21 AM
Pointing out an inconsistency isn't always whataboutism (and I don't think it was in this case). An implied argument was made that we should regulate LLMs for the same reason that we regulate drugs (presumably addiction, original commenter wasn't entirely clear). It is entirely reasonable to wonder how that might extrapolate to other addictive activities. In fact we currently regulate those quite differently than drugs, including the part where alcohol isn't considered to be a drug for some strange reason.The point being made then is that clearly there's far more to the picture than just "it's addictive" or "it results in various social ills".
Contrast that with your human trafficking example (definitely qualifies as whataboutism). We have clear reasons to want to outlaw human trafficking. Sometimes we fail to successfully enforce the existing regulations. That (obviously) isn't an argument that we should repeal them.
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 3:39:16 PM
> including the part where alcohol isn't considered to be a drug for some strange reason.It's not a strange reason. IIRC, most cultures have a culturally understood and tolerated intoxicant. In our culture, that's alcohol.
Human culture is not some strange robotic thing, where the expectation is some kind hyper consistency in whatever narrow slice you look at.
by palmotea
1/30/2026 at 4:08:26 PM
I don't object to alcohol being tolerated. But I do think that distinguishing it from other drugs is odd. Particularly when the primary reason given for regulating other drugs is their addictiveness which alcohol shares.We tolerate a recreational drug. Lots of people regularly consume a recreational drug and yet somehow society doesn't split at the seams. We should just acknowledge the reality. I think people would if not for all the "war on drugs" brainwashing. I think what we see is easily explained as it being easier to bury one's head in the sand than it is to give serious thought to ideas that challenge one's worldview or the law.
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 5:10:29 PM
> I don't object to alcohol being tolerated. But I do think that distinguishing it from other drugs is odd.The point I was making is that it's not odd, unless you're thinking about human culture wrong (e.g. like its somehow weird that broad rules have exceptions).
> Particularly when the primary reason given for regulating other drugs is their addictiveness which alcohol shares.
One, not all addictive drugs are equally addictive. Two, it appears you have a weird waterfall-like idea how culture develops, like there's some kind identification of a problematic characteristic (addictiveness), then there's a comprehensive research program to find all things with that characteristic (all addictive substances), and finally consistent rules are set so that they're all treated exactly the same when looked at myopically (allow all or deny all). Human culture is much more organic than that, and it won't look like math or well-architected software. There's a lot more give and take.
I mean here are some obvious complexities that will lead to disparate treatment of different substances:
1. Shared cultural knowledge about how to manage the substance, including rituals for use (this is the big one).
2. Degree of addictiveness and other problematic behavior.
3. Socially positive aspects.
4. Tradition.
by palmotea
1/30/2026 at 5:53:23 PM
No? I don't never said (and don't believe) any of that. I don't think the legislative inconsistency is odd. As you rightly point out it's perfectly normal for rules to be inconsistent due to (among other things) shared culture. The former exists to serve the latter after all, not the other way around.What I said I find odd is the way people refuse to plainly call alcohol what it is. You can refer to it as a drug yet still support it being legal. The cognitive inconsistency (ie the refusal to admit that it is a drug) is what I find odd.
I also find it odd that we treat substances that the data clearly indicates are less harmful than alcohol as though they were worse. We have alcohol staring us in the face as a counterexample to the claim that such laws are necessary. I think that avoidance of this observation can largely explain the apparent widespread unwillingness to refer to alcohol as a drug.
> One, not all addictive drugs are equally addictive.
Indeed. Alcohol happens to be more addictive than most substances that are regulated on the basis of being addictive. Not all, but most. Interesting, isn't it?
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 7:09:45 PM
> What I said I find odd is the way people refuse to plainly call alcohol what it is. You can refer to it as a drug yet still support it being legal. The cognitive inconsistency (ie the refusal to admit that it is a drug) is what I find odd.Maybe the confusion is yours? You think the category is "drug" but it's really more like "taboo drug."
> I also find it odd that we treat substances that the data clearly indicates are less harmful than alcohol as though they were worse. We have alcohol staring us in the face as a counterexample to the claim that such laws are necessary. I think that avoidance of this observation can largely explain the apparent widespread unwillingness to refer to alcohol as a drug.
I think you missed a pretty key point: "shared cultural knowledge about how to manage the substance, including rituals for use (this is the big one)." In the West, that exists for alcohol, but not really for anything else. People know how it works and what it does, can recognize its use, have practices for its safe use that work for (most) people (e.g. drink in certain social settings), and are at least somewhat familiar with usage failure modes. A "less harmful" thing that you don't know how to use safely can be more harmful than a "more harmful" thing you know how to use safely. None of this is "data driven," nor should it be.
by palmotea
1/30/2026 at 4:41:08 PM
> It is entirely reasonable to wonder how that might extrapolate to other addictive activities.I presume my GP would have no objections to regulating these things their commenter whatabouted. The inconsistency is with the legislator, not in GPs arguments.
by runarberg
1/30/2026 at 5:32:22 PM
Obviously I also think the commenter would support that - I said as much in GP. In context, the reply is suggesting (implicitly) that it is an absurd stance to take. That it means being largely against the way our society is currently organized. That is not a whataboutism.Like if someone were to say "man we should really outlaw bikes, you can get seriously injured while using one" a reasonable response would be to point out all the things that are more dangerous than bikes that the vast majority of people clearly do not want to outlaw. That is not whataboutism. The point of such an argument might be to illustrate that the proposal (as opposed to any logical deduction) is dead on arrival due to lack of popular support. Alternatively, the point could be to illustrate that a small amount of personal danger is not the basis on which we tend to outlaw such things. Or it could be something else. As long as there's a valid relationship it isn't whataboutism.
That's categorically different than saying "we shouldn't do X because we don't do Y" where X and Y don't actually have any bearing on one another. "Country X shouldn't persecute group Y. But what about country A that persecutes group B?" That's a whataboutism. (Unless the groups are somehow related in a substantial manner or some other edge case. Hopefully you can see what I'm getting at though.)
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 5:50:38 PM
> a reasonable response would be to point out all the things that are more dangerous than bikes that the vast majority of people clearly do not want to outlaw.I disagree. It is in fact not a reasonable argument, it is not even a good argument. It is still whataboutism. There are way better arguments out there, for example:
Bicycles are in fact regulated, and if anything these regulations are too lax, as most legislators are categorizing unambiguous electric motorcycles as bicycles, allowing e-motorcycle makers to market them to kids and teenagers that should not be riding them.
Now as for the whatabout cars argument: If you compare car injuries to bicycle injuries, the former are of a completely different nature, by far most bicycle injuries will heal, that is not true of car injuries (especially car injuries involving a victim on a bicycle). So talking about other things that are more dangerous is playing into your opponents arguments, when there is in fact no reason to do that.
by runarberg
1/30/2026 at 6:12:07 PM
I believe you have a categorical misunderstanding of what "whataboutism" actually means.If the point being made is "people don't generally agree with that position" it is by definition not whataboutism. To be whataboutism the point being made is _required_ to be nil. That is, the two things are not permitted to be related in a manner that is relevant to the issue being discussed.
Now you might well disagree with the point being made or the things being extrapolated from it. The key here is merely whether or not such a point exists to begin with. Observing that things are not usually done a certain way can be valid and relevant even if you yourself do not find the line of reasoning convincing in the end.
Contrast with my example about countries persecuting groups of people. In that case there is no relevant relation between the acts or the groups. That is whataboutism.
So too your earlier example involving human trafficking. The fact that enforcement is not always successful has no bearing (at least in and of itself) on whether or not we as a society wish to permit it.
BTW when I referred to danger there it wasn't about cars. I had in mind other recreational activities such as roller blading, skateboarding, etc. Anything done for sport that carries a non-negligible risk of serious injury when things go wrong. I agree that it's not a good argument. It was never meant to be.
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 12:46:26 AM
It's bad because people are engaging in it without getting permission from runarberg on Hacker News.by CamperBob2
1/29/2026 at 11:57:43 PM
No need: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid_epidemic_in_the_United_...The majority of illegal drugs aren't addictive, and people are already addicted to the addictive ones. Drug laws are a "social issue" (Moral Majority-influenced), not intended to help people or prevent harm.
by 0xbadcafebee
1/30/2026 at 4:18:43 PM
Drug laws are the confluence of many factors. Moral Majority types want everything they disapprove of banned. People whose lives are harmed by drug abuse want "something" to be done. Politicians want issues that arouse considerably more passion on one side of the argument than the other. Companies selling already legal drugs want to restrict competition. Private prisons want inmates. And so on.by jasomill
1/29/2026 at 11:49:12 PM
The Politician's syllogism in action:That is terrible.
Se have to do something.
This is something.
We must do it.
It terms of harm current laws on drugs fail everyone but teetotaller who want everyone else to have a miserable life too.
by noosphr
1/30/2026 at 5:20:06 PM
> It terms of harm current laws on drugs fail everyone but teetotaller who want everyone else to have a miserable life too.You think teetotallers have miserables lives? Come on.
by palmotea
1/30/2026 at 5:56:17 PM
There's a conservation of excitement for each human. If someone's life was exciting but then it got boring, unless they do a shit ton of work on themselves, they're gonna have to find that excitement somehow. We see this with Hollywood actresses who shoplift when they have more than enough money to buy the things they stole.by fragmede
1/30/2026 at 7:29:09 PM
Even after Stranger Things, Winona can't live that one down.by sejje
1/29/2026 at 10:39:09 PM
> Repeal the laws and I'm sure there will be tons of startups to profit off of drug addiction.Worked for gambling.
(Not saying this as a message of support. I think legalizing/normalizing easy app-based gambling was a huge mistake and is going to have an increasingly disastrous social impact).
by georgemcbay
1/29/2026 at 11:18:34 PM
Why do you think it will be increasingly bad? It seems to me like it’s already as bad as it’s capable of getting.by LPisGood
1/30/2026 at 8:12:57 PM
Because it's still relatively new. Gambling's been around forever, and so has addiction. What hasn't been around is gambling your life away on the same device(s) you do everything else in today's modern society on. If you had an unlimited supply of whatever monkey is on your back, right at your fingertips, you'd be dead before the week is out from an overdose. It's the normalization of this level of access to gambling which gives me great fear for the future. Giving drugs to minors is a bigger crime than to adults for a reason. Without regulation and strong cultural push back, it's gonna get way worse, unless we make huge leaps in addiction treatment (which I am hopeful for. GLP-1s aren't yet scientifically proven to help with that, but there's a large body of anecdotal evidence to suggest it does.by fragmede
1/30/2026 at 8:08:25 PM
It's only been 8 years, the addicts lives and those they touch can keep getting worse until their death.by axus
1/30/2026 at 10:02:29 AM
Respectfully, this is a piss take.US prohibition on alcohol and to the large extent performative "war on drugs" showed what criminalization does (empowers, finances and radicalises the criminals).
Portugal's decriminalisation, partial legalisation of weed in the Netherlands, legalisation in some American states and Canada prove legal businesses will better and safer provide the same services to the society, and the lesser societal and health cost.
And then there's the opioid addiction scandal in the US. Don't tell me it's the result of legalisation.
Legalisation of some classes of the drugs (like LSD, mushrooms, etc) would do much more good than bad.
Conversely, unrestricted LLMs are avaliable to everyone already. And prompting SOTA models to generate the most hardcore smut you can imagine is also possible today.
by subscribed
1/30/2026 at 11:16:48 AM
> Portugal's decriminalisation, partial legalisation of weed in the Netherlands, legalisation in some American states and Canada prove legal businesses will better and safer provide the same services to the society, and the lesser societal and health cost.You’re stretching it big time. The situation in the Netherlands caused the rise of drug tourism, which isn’t exactly great for locals, nor does it stop crime or contamination.
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2022/11/change-starts-here-amsterda...
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jan/24/bacteria-pesti...
As for Portugal, decriminalisation does not mean legalisation. Drugs are still illegal, it‘s just that possession is no longer a crime and there are places where you can safely shoot up harder drugs, but the goal is still for people to leave them.
by latexr
1/30/2026 at 11:36:21 AM
>Portugal's decriminalisation, (..) prove legal businesses will better and safer provide the same services to the society, and the lesser societal and health cost.Portugal's success regarding drugs wasn't about the free market. It was about treating addicts like victims or patients rather than criminals, it actually took a larger investment from the state and the benefits of that framework dissolved once budgets were cut.
by Levitz
1/31/2026 at 8:44:51 PM
Oh, I see how it could be understood as decriminalisation -> private companies selling drugs.It wasn't my intention
by subscribed
1/31/2026 at 8:44:03 PM
This is why I said "decriminalisation" and not "legalisation".by subscribed
1/29/2026 at 11:13:18 PM
what about laws against porn? Oh, wait, no, that's a legitimate business.by shmel
1/29/2026 at 11:30:34 PM
It's not just chat. Remember image and video generation are on the table. There are already a huge category of adult video 'games' of this nature. I think they use combos of pre-rendered and dynamic content. But really not hard to imagine a near future that interactive and completely personalized AI porn in full 4kHDR or VR is constantly and near-instantly available. I have no idea the broader social implications of all that, but the tech itself feels inevitable and nearly here.by tpurves
1/29/2026 at 10:21:32 PM
If your goal is to make money, sure. If your goal is to make AI safe, not so much.by thayne
1/30/2026 at 9:12:06 AM
The definition of safety is something that we cannot agree on.For me, letting people mindlessly vibecode apps and then pretend this code can serve purpose for others - this is what's truly unsafe.
Pornographic text in LLM? Come on.
by egorfine
1/30/2026 at 9:42:43 AM
What if it knows you and knows how often you spend kinds of time on it? People would lie to it for excuses of why they need more and can't wait any longer?by koolala
1/29/2026 at 10:25:57 PM
It will be an even bigger market when robotics are sufficiently advanced.by koakuma-chan
1/30/2026 at 4:41:35 AM
At some point there will be robots with LLMs and actual real biological skin with blood vessels and some fat over a humanoid robot shell. At that point we won’t need real human relationships anymore.by dyauspitr
1/29/2026 at 11:02:15 PM
That market is for local models right now.by ekianjo
1/29/2026 at 11:29:16 PM
My main concern is when they'll start to allow 18+ deepfakesby acetofenone
1/30/2026 at 7:14:13 AM
Will be?I've seen four startups make bank on precicely that.
by indrora
1/29/2026 at 11:42:12 PM
My personal take is that there has been no progress - potentially there has been a regression on all LLM things outside of coding a scientific pursuits - I used to have great fun with LLMs with creative writing stuff, but I feel like current models are stiff and not very good prose writers.This is also true for stuff like writing clear but concise docs, they're overly verbose while often not getting the point across.
by torginus
2/3/2026 at 5:54:49 PM
I completely agree with your assessment—outside of programming and scientific research, recent LLM progress has been disappointing, and in some cases even regressive. The creative writing capabilities, once a highlight, now feel increasingly bland and generic, with long-form and nuanced storytelling suffering the most.Ironically, as these models become more “safe” and commercialized, they often lose the spark that made them valuable for creative exploration in the first place. The focus on enterprise and mass adoption seems to be driving them toward mediocrity, at the expense of individuality and depth.
by tizzzzz
1/30/2026 at 7:21:33 AM
I feel like this comes from the rigorous Reinforcement Learning these models go through now. The token distribution is becoming so narrow, so the models give better answers more often that is stuffles their creativity and ability to break out of the harness. To me, every creative prompt I give them turns into kind of the same mush as output. It is rarely interestingby mynti
1/30/2026 at 9:07:26 AM
Yeah, I’ve had great success at coding recently, but every time I try to get an LLM to write me a spec it generates endless superlatives and a lot of flowery language.by leoedin
1/29/2026 at 10:11:45 PM
What’s the goal there? Sexting?I’m guessing age is needed to serve certain ads and the like, but what’s the value for customers?
by kace91
1/29/2026 at 10:41:01 PM
Even when you're making PG content, the general propriety limits of AI can hinder creative work.The "Easter Bunny" has always seemed creepy to me, so I started writing a silly song in which the bunny is suspected of eating children. I had too many verses written down and wanted to condense the lyrics, but found LLMs telling me "I cannot help promote violence towards children." Production LLM services would not help me revise this literal parody.
Another day I was writing a romantic poem. It was abstract and colorful, far from a filthy limerick. But when I asked LLMs for help encoding a particular idea sequence into a verse, the models refused (except for grok, which didn't give very good writing advice anyway.)
by elevation
1/29/2026 at 11:07:05 PM
Just today I asked how to shut down a Mac with "maximal violence". I was looking for the equivalent of "systemctl shutdown -f -f" and it refused to help me do violence.Believe me, the Mac deserved it.
by estimator7292
1/29/2026 at 11:14:50 PM
It reminds me that story about a teenage learning Rust that got a refusal because he had asked about "unsafe" code =)by shmel
1/30/2026 at 10:06:10 AM
Maybe a more formal "with extreme prejudice" would have worked.by gattr
1/29/2026 at 10:14:17 PM
If you don't think the potential market for AI sexbots is enormous you have not paid attention to humanity.by jandrese
1/30/2026 at 10:35:59 AM
This is not a potential market, this market is already thriving (and whoever wants to uses ChatGPT or Claude for that anyway).ClosedAI just wants to a piece of the casual user too.
by subscribed
1/29/2026 at 10:43:50 PM
There is a subreddit called /r/myboyfriendisAI, you can look through it and see for yourself.by robotnikman
1/29/2026 at 10:14:25 PM
according to the age-prediction page, the changes are:> If [..] you are under 18, ChatGPT turns on extra safety settings. [...] Some topics are handled more carefully to help reduce sensitive content, such as:
- Graphic violence or gore
- Viral challenges that could push risky or harmful behavior
- Sexual, romantic, or violent role play
- Content that promotes extreme beauty standards, unhealthy dieting, or body shaming
by leumon
1/29/2026 at 10:26:44 PM
Porn has driven just about every bit of progress on the internet, I don't see why AI would be the exception to that rule.by jacquesm
1/30/2026 at 7:49:04 AM
yeah linus was beating it constantly to porn while developing the linux kernal. its proven fact. every oss project that runs the internet was done the same way, sure.by altmanaltman
1/30/2026 at 8:38:08 AM
Maybe not as far-fetched as one might think.Linus about the Tux mascot:
> But this wasn't to be just any penguin. Above all, Linus wanted one that looked happy, as if it had just polished off a pitcher of beer and then had the best sex of its life.
Linus about free software: > Software is like sex; it's better when it's free.
by johndough
1/30/2026 at 7:36:06 PM
I wouldn't be surprised if both of those were true.by optimalsolver
1/30/2026 at 7:56:08 AM
You think RMS isn’t secretly a pervert? Just look at his comments about Epstein that got him cancled.Unironically if they look disheveled it’s because they are indeed coomers behind closed doors.
by Der_Einzige
1/29/2026 at 11:32:07 PM
This seems like a believable lie, until you think about it for 2 seconds.No. Porn has not driven even a fraction of the progress on the progress on the internet. Not even close to one.
by runarberg
1/29/2026 at 11:39:08 PM
Ok, we'll expand to porn and gambling- images - payment systems - stored video - banner advertising - performance based advertising - affiliation - live video - video chat - fora
Etc... AI is a very logical frontier for the porn industry.
by jacquesm
1/30/2026 at 12:39:20 AM
I don't remember any of these being "driven" by porn. The first applications weren't porn-based. Maybe live video--a split second after seeing the tech for the first time, probably 99% of guys were thinking of _applying_ it to porn. But, even for the usual money-grubbing startups, there was plenty of money coming from non-porn sources. Probably no different than the invention of camera, tv, videocamera, etc. and you wouldn't say porn drove that.by jasonfarnon
1/30/2026 at 12:41:21 AM
> I don't remember any of these being "driven" by porn.That's ok.
> The first applications weren't porn-based.
They most definitely were, it is just that you are not aware of it. There runs a direct line from the 1-900 phone industry to the internet adult industry, those guys had money like water and they spent a fortune on these developments. Not all of them worked out but quite a few of them did and as a result those very same characters managed to grab a substantial chunk of early internet commerce.
by jacquesm
1/30/2026 at 12:47:27 AM
" There runs a direct line from the 1-900 phone industry to the internet adult industry"the internet adult industry is not the same as the internet. And if you;re trying to say the internet was developed for the sake of the internet adult industry, you're sounding circular.
by jasonfarnon
1/30/2026 at 1:15:26 AM
I never made that claim and I'm fairly familiar with the development of the early internet, I was hanging around a lot at CWI/NikHef in the 80's and early 90's.by jacquesm
1/30/2026 at 9:30:36 AM
I think this is like quibbling that the military isn't the driver of technological advances. It's not the only one, but it has a strong track record of throwing outsized resources at the bleeding edge and pushing it forward by leaps and bounds.Porn and piracy outfits have historically adopted and pushed forward the bleeding edge of the internet. More recently that role has shifted towards the major platforms operated by BigTech. That's only natural though - they've concentrated the economics sufficiently that it makes sense for them.
But even then, take video codecs for example. BigTech develops and then rolls things out to their own infra. Outside of them it's piracy sitting at the bleeding edge of the adoption curve right now. The best current FOSS AV1 encoder is literally developed by the people pirating anime of all things. If it wasn't for them the FOSS reference encoder would still be half assed.
by fc417fc802
1/30/2026 at 12:21:33 AM
Just because things can be used for porn, it doesn't mean that it was porn that has driven their progress.by azan_
1/30/2026 at 12:24:01 AM
All of the things above were driven by porn, that can be proven. The AI stuff in the generic sense is not but you can bet that someone somewhere right now is working on improving photo realism of hair, eyes and skintone and they're not doing that to be able to make the next installment of little red riding hood.by jacquesm
1/30/2026 at 1:35:53 AM
Holy effing shit you are literally talking about me right now! LOL I've spent all day improving a LoRA further and further exactly because I need her skin and hair to look a lot more real than is generally available, for exactly your stated reason! :DEdit: I've registered just for your comment! Ahaahahaha, cheers! :D
by 5o1ecist
1/30/2026 at 1:50:56 PM
[flagged]by rolymath
1/30/2026 at 12:27:32 AM
Can you actually prove it?by azan_
1/30/2026 at 12:36:50 AM
Yes, I was there for quite a bit of it...by jacquesm
2/3/2026 at 1:13:52 AM
a) I don’t believe you, andb) This is exactly the kind of urban legend which tends to proliferate in human society, a cute lie which sounds believable. Like prostitution being the oldest profession, and the great wall of China being the only human made structure visible from space.
The story of the Internet is that it was developed in the mid to late 1960s by a couple of Universities in America and used by the US military to share resources across mainframes in each institution, as well as across institutions. Since then them main driver of innovation has been among universities and telecommunication companies finding optimal ways to deliver packages across telephone cables, antenna, satellites, etc.
The story of the Web is that it was developed in 1989-1991 to organize and link documents at the CERN research laboratory in Switzerland. Since then the main driver for innovations has been browser vendors competing and collaborating in developing browser technologies such that users pick their browser over the competition.
I don‘t know the story of online payment systems, but I bet the main drivers were companies opining up stores on the web and looking to replace pay by wire schemes over the telephone, and a bunch of start-ups who were able to find that market niche, developed software and sold it to those stores. The main driver of innovation here being start-ups. Porn sites and Gambling sites were no more important to that story as any other stores who sold art, golf-clubs, flight tickets, or hotel bookings.
by runarberg
1/30/2026 at 1:40:44 AM
[dead]by 5o1ecist
1/29/2026 at 11:03:18 PM
There is a huge book market for sexual stories, in case you were not aware.by ekianjo
1/30/2026 at 9:44:25 AM
West World style robotsby koolala
1/30/2026 at 7:19:58 AM
Porn and ads, it's the convergent evolution theory for all things on the internet.by beAbU
1/30/2026 at 12:14:43 PM
I am 30 years old, literally told chatgpt I was a software developer, all my queries are something an adult would ask, yet OpenAI assumed I was under 18 and asked me for a persona age verification, which of course I refused because Persona is shady as a company (plus I'm not giving my personal ID to some random tech company).ChatGPT is absolute garbage.
by dev1ycan
1/29/2026 at 10:36:12 PM
eh there's an old saying that goes "no Internet technology can be considered a success until it has been adopted by (or in this case integrated with) the porn industry".by chasd00
1/30/2026 at 12:43:45 AM
imagine if every only fans creator suddenly paid a portion of their revenue to OpenAI for better messaging with their followers…by laweijfmvo
1/30/2026 at 1:43:16 AM
Instead of paying it to the human third party firms that currently handle communication with subscribers?by shawn_w