دورجلقی،(به انگلیسی: Teledildonics) یا جلق سایبری، (به انگلیسی: cyberdildonics) به معنی بهرهگیری از هر نوع فناوری یا دستگاهی برای فرستادن دادههای لامسهای میان دو فرد به جهت خودارضایی از راه دور است. این عبارت همچنین میتواند به ترکیب دورحضوری با آمیزش جنسی که معمولاً از راه اینترنت میسر است، اشاره داشته باشد. در واقع این نوواژه نخستین بار به سال ۱۹۷۵ توسط تئودور هولم نلسون[۱] در کتابش به نام آزمایشگاه رایانه، ماشینهای رؤیایی آورده شد.
این عبارت کمی مبهم است؛ چراکه بهطور مثال به هیچگونه اسباببازی جنسی قابل هدایت از راه دور که بتواند جانشینی برای سکس انسانی باشد، اشاره نمیکند.[۲][۳] طرفداران چنین ابزارهایی از دهه ۱۹۸۰ به بعد اظهار کردهاند که این فناوریها «بزرگترین اختراع بعدی» در زمینه سکس مجازی هستند.[۴] طبق گزارشی در شیکاگو تریبون به سال ۱۹۹۳، «در آینده، فناوری واقعیت مجازی به بشر این امکان را میدهد که با پوشیدن لباسهای ویژه، سربند و دستکشهای ویژه، بتواند از راه رایانههایی که به خطوط تلفن متصل هستند از راه دور و در مکانهای جداگانه از حیث جغرافیایی، با همنوعان خود رابطه جنسی برقرار کند.»[۵]
اسباببازیهای جنسی در بازار هستند که به شریک جنسی فرد اجازه میدهند از راه دور با هدایت کردن آن، وی را به اوج لذت جنسی برساند.[۶] گاهی این اسباببازیها به همراه فیلمهایی ارائه میشوند و حرکاتشان با سناریوی فیلم هماهنگپذیر است. چنین ابزارهایی را میتوان از راه اتصال بلوتوث نیز هدایت کرد. طبق گزارشی به سال ۲۰۰۸، فرد میتواند از این ابزارهای دورجلقی در محل کار نیز برای تنها آرام کردن خود بهره ببرد و سکس واقعی را با شریک خود در هنگام عصر یا شب به انجام برساند.[۷] فناوریهای جدید حتی این امکان را به افراد میدهند که از راه وب با یکدیگر «ارتباط صمیمانه احساسی» برقرار کنند.[۸] هماکنون برخی ارائهکنندگان خدمات جنسی آنلاین از فناوری دورجلقی برای کاربران خود بهره میگیرند.[۹]
یکی از منتقدان کتاب دیوید لوی به نام عشق و سکس با رباتها در روزنامه گاردین به سال ۲۰۰۸ چنین بیان کرد که دورجلقی «یک انقلاب اجتماعی و فناوری است» که در آن رباتها نقش بسیار حیاتی ایفا خواهند کرد «و با انگشتان جادوییشان، نیازهای ما را برآورده خواهند کرد.» لوی معتقد است تا سال ۲۰۵۰، «سکس با رباتها به امری رایج و عادی بدل خواهد شد.»[۳]
برخی محصولات مرتبط با دورجلقی و سکس با رباتها در موزه سکسنیویورک به نمایش گذاشته شدهاند.[۱۰]
شرکتهای بیشماری که در این زمینه در حال کار هستند یا بودهاند، به سبب ثبت اختراع مورد شکایت واقع شدهاند.[۱۱] از همین روی، ثبت اختراع در زمینه دورجلقی را «احمقانهترین نوع ثبت اختراع» لقب دادهاند.[۱۲]
↑Stuart Jeffries (9 September 2008). "How has The Joy of Sex changed since 1972?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2011-02-08. … Text, email, webcams, teledildonics can all be used to wind each other up to fever pitch during the working day prior to extended evening action ...
↑Aleks Krotoski (6 February 2011). "What effect has the internet had on our sex lives?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2011-02-08. And the web is all about helping people establish emotional connections. Throw in some erotic imagery, augmented teledildonics technologies, or a bit of sexting or Skyping, and you have the makings of a rather extraordinary, albeit mediated, relationship.
↑"For Pleasure". Slate Magazine. 2011-02-08. Archived from the original on February 11, 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-08. At a small and private teledildonics demonstration on June 1, 2005, sex writer Violet Blue, while in San Francisco, induced two orgasms in her partner, who was riding a custom-made mega-vibrator known as a Thrillhammer at the Museum of Sex in New York City. The event included a few technical hitches: At one point the woman (shown here at a different demonstration) knocked an electrical cord out of the socket. It seems that teledildonics—remote-control vibrator sex via computer—has a long way to go.
Teledildonics (also known as cyberdildonics) is technology for remote sex (or, at least, remote mutual masturbation), where tactile sensations are communicated over a data link between the participants. The term can also refer to the integration of telepresence with sexual activity that these interfaces make possible.
The term has also been used less accurately (since there's no "tele-" element) to refer to robotic sex, i.e. computer-controlled sex toys that aim to substitute for or improve upon sex with a human partner.[1][2]
Sex toys that can be manipulated remotely by another party may be on the market.[3] These toys sometimes come with movies to which the toys' actions are synchronized by means of a previously-written script. Other products being released fit a new category called bluedildonics, which allow a sex toy to be controlled remotely via a Bluetooth connection. A report in 2008 suggested that teledildonics, along with text and email and webcams, can be used to "wind each other up to fever pitch during the working day" as a prelude to sex with a human during the evening hours.[4] New technologies can help people establish "emotional connections" via the web.[5] Indeed, teledildonics technology has already been integrated with adult online webcam services and certain sex toys.[6] such as OhMiBod, Lovense and We-Vibe.[7][8]
A book reviewer of David Levy's Love and Sex with Robots in The Guardian in 2008 suggested that teledildonics was "but one stage in a technological and social revolution" in which robots will play an increasingly important role, with artificial lifeforms that will "attend to our needs with magic fingers"; Levy argued that by 2050 "sex with robots will be commonplace."[2] Some products have been shown at the Museum of Sex in New York City.[9]
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Promoters of these devices have claimed since the 1980s they are the "next big thing" in cybersex technology.[10] A report in the Chicago Tribune in 1993 suggested that teledildonics was "the virtual-reality technology that may one day allow people wearing special bodysuits, headgear and gloves to engage in tactile sexual relations from separate, remote locations via computers connected to phone lines."[11]
The responses to teledildonics has been mixed, however the dominant concern has centred on the separation of personal intimacy and embodied presence. In the words of one early text on the subject:[12]
Indeed, pushing at the cultural-technical limits of the integrity-fragmentation contradiction can, in the short term, supercharge the disembodied body with 'sensual', transgressive ambiguity. For example, ‘teledildonics’, computer-simulated; sexual arousal by wearing plugged-in bodysuits, may never become widely practised, but it certainly provokes interest as a risque possibility ... [T]echno-sex contributes to hollowing out the corporeal taken-for-grantedness of which, paradoxically, it depends.
At the 2016 South by Southwest Festival virtual reality entrepreneur Ela Darling asserted that patent holders were preventing the production of teledildonic technology.[13]
Many companies experimenting in the field have been hit with patent lawsuits.[14]
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has named one such patent the "stupid patent of the month".[15] That patent expired in August 2018, lowering the barrier of entry to the field.[16]
^Stuart Jeffries (9 September 2008). "How has The Joy of Sex changed since 1972?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2011-02-08. ... Text, email, webcams, teledildonics can all be used to wind each other up to fever pitch during the working day prior to extended evening action ...
^Aleks Krotoski (6 February 2011). "What effect has the internet had on our sex lives?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2011-02-08. And the web is all about helping people establish emotional connections. Throw in some erotic imagery, augmented teledildonics technologies, or a bit of sexting or Skyping, and you have the makings of a rather extraordinary, albeit mediated, relationship.
^"For Pleasure". Slate Magazine. 2011-02-08. Archived from the original on February 11, 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-08. At a small and private teledildonics demonstration on June 1, 2005, sex writer Violet Blue, while in San Francisco, induced two orgasms in her partner, who was riding a custom-made mega-vibrator known as a Thrillhammer at the Museum of Sex in New York City. The event included a few technical hitches: At one point the woman (shown here at a different demonstration) knocked an electrical cord out of the socket. It seems that teledildonics—remote-control vibrator sex via computer—has a long way to go.
This audio file was created from a revision of the article "Teledildonics" dated 2010-01-07, and does not reflect subsequent edits to the article. (Audio help)