I cash in as porn star without having sex after selling likeness to AI company -they can do whatever they want to ‘me’
AN ADULT star has revealed that she can now make cash without having to have sex, after selling her likeness to an AI company.
Chloe Amour 33, has spent years in the porn industry, making films with some of the biggest studios in the industry.
Chloe Amour can now make cash without having to do any work[/caption] She said she wishes she had sold her likeness to AI sooner[/caption]However, the star, from Las Vegas has now found a way to entertain paying customers, without having to strip off.
Chloe explained that often her fans tell her they want to chat with her directly, which they can now do with her AI likeness.
“I can be everything that they want me to be in a sense,’ she told DailyMail.com
“It’s very transparent because they’re aware that this is AI, it’s not me physically behind the device communicating with you – you know that you’re paying for.”
Chloe revealed that she was approached by the AI company, who paid her to provide them with photos, videos and personal information, so that they could make her AI counterpart as realistic as possible.
She admitted that she does finds some aspects of AI “scary and weird” but loves being able to make cash without doing anything.
She added that sometimes she is on porn shoots for up to 12 hours, which can get extremely tiring, so she prefers sharing her workload with the AI.
Asked if she had any regrets about selling her likeness, Chloe said: “I should’ve signed up with them sooner because I would’ve gotten a bigger bonus!”
Whilst likenesses of real-life porn stars are gaining popularity, some prefer to make their own AI girlfriend from scratch using apps such as CamSoda and Candy.AI.
However, Dr. Gregory Jantz previously told the US Sun that these bots will not satisfy people’s needs.
Dr. Jantz, who runs a successful treatment center called A Place of Hope, fears the notion of always having “an accessible” loved one connected to a phone or computer is only making relationship and emotional issues worse.
And with fewer people looking for his expert help and instead seeking solace with a screen, Dr. Jantz is even more worried.
Despite warnings aimed at moving app developers using ChatGPT away from creating romantically programmed bots, some companies have reported huge success with online girlfriend services.
One has been boasting about earning $30,000 a month from infatuated men desperately searching for love via the website FoxyAI.
Artificial Intelligence explained
Here's what you need to know
- Artificial intelligence, also known as AI, is a type of computer software
- Typically, a computer will do what you tell it to do
- But artificial intelligence simulates the human mind, and can make its own deductions, inferences or decisions
- A simple computer might let you set an alarm to wake you up
- But an AI system might scan your emails, work out that you’ve got a meeting tomorrow, and then set an alarm and plan a journey for you
- AI tech is often “trained” – which means it observes something (potentially even a human) then learns about a task over time
- For instance, an AI system can be fed thousands of photos of human faces, then generate photos of human faces all on its own
- Some experts have raised concerns that humans will eventually lose control of super-intelligent AI
- But the tech world is still divided over whether or not AI tech will eventually kill us all in a Terminator-style apocalypse
“We are just now beginning to see the emergence of individuals who would rather be intimate with an AI object than another real human being,” lamented Seattle-based Dr. Jantz.
He has seen an increasing number of patients within the last 12 months needing help to curb digital addictions, which are treated in the same way as alcohol or drug problems.
“We do know that you can create an emotional bond to that technology, to that social media, and to that AI girlfriend.
“An emotional connection is made so you will go through withdrawal when that is extracted.”
“As a mental health expert, I don’t like the direction we’re going.”
“If you’ve stepped into this already, watch where it can take you,” concluded Dr. Jantz.
“AI is not going to bring you a meal. We’re setting ourselves up for a lot of future despondency,
“Watch how unfulfilled it will end up being.”