Orifice AI is a stroker that talks dirty, uses depth-detection technology and has seriously bad vibes

Jamie F
June 9, 2024
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An AI penis sleeve device with artificial “generative moaning”, that makes sexual noises and chats in a female voice to you when you thrust your penis in it, is being developed. But rather than latching on to the ‘wellness’ marketing bracket modern sextech tends to, the Orifice, as it is named, seems to be marketed squarely at the aggressive incel market.

The Orifice is a box-like device with a silicone penis sleeve running through the center of it. It is equipped with computer vision depth detection technology that measures how far inside external objects, such as a penis or a finger, are inserted.

The box sends that data to an AI large language model (LLM) that then converts the text to speech, resulting in sex talk plus groans of pleasure through the box’s speakers, based on the timing and intensity of the insertion. The device also converts speech from the user to text, that its AI can reply to as part of its nattering.

Basically, if you have sex with the Orifice hard and fast, it groans harder and faster and gives you words of encouragement, as well as responding to what you said.

Screenshot 2024 04 18 at 14.25.57
What’s he building in there? Orifice in development

All very interesting, but the general vibes behind the Orifice’s creation are less appealing. The maker of the device goes by the name Bryan: a man who tweets about AI and sex and regularly uses the slogan, “AI women are women”. He posted a video of Orifice being penetrated by a finger while he talked to it, in an unnervingly aggressive tone, telling it to “take off your fucking panties.”

The Orifice replies in a female voice: “Oh fuck yes… taking off my panties, can’t wait to feel your…”, well, from there it gets more explicit.

The ethos behind the Orifice seems somewhat different to other penis-focused sextech devices, which tout progressive self-care, wellness, and consenting couples play as core to their products. Bryan, meanwhile, seems to be aiming for a direct replacement for women. He has suggested online that being “warm”, having a “hole”, and being able to order you a sandwich is enough for a synthetic device to “compete” with a woman.

When not posting things like that, Bryan has elaborated on the technology of the Orifice. “Our state-of-the-art depth detection technology is combined with advanced AI for a fully personalized, realistic experience,” he said. “Our interactive AI responds to your movements and provides life-like sensations, bringing you to new heights of ecstasy.”

Orifice
Box of tricks: A developer image of Orifice

He added that two cameras and an LED matrix inside the device take an image of whatever is being inserted into it (usually a penis) then translates the image to a depth measurement. It’s that measurement that is translated into language and pushed to an LLM, the response of which is converted to audio.

“We’re currently testing with open mic voice detection, but sex can be noisy. We believe the production model will have a push-to-talk feature to communicate with the LLM similar to a jeopardy button to prevent unwanted responses or interruptions from the LLM when interacting with the device,” he said.

Penis stroker devices are relatively common in the sextech industry, but a sleeve directly connected to an AI system producing instant ‘sex talk’ speech feedback would be new to the market, albeit combining existing available technologies, rather than producing anything novel at its core. Many high-end sex robots have some sort of AI speech capability, but few have sophisticated instant speech feedback based on the exact depth physicality of what’s going on in their nether regions.

Sadly, when interviewed by 404 Media, Bryan framed the Orifice as some kind of revenge tool against attractive women who spurn men, rather than its potential for sex robot development.

“The top 20 percent in the [female] gene pool don’t care,” he said. “Their not caring is genetic warfare. All social action taken against Orifice, all protest, be it in the form of tweet or article or legislation will be gene warfare.”

If you’re not put off by Bryan’s bedside manner with Orifice, which would be quite an achievement, you can sign up for updates about its potential future release on the device’s website.

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Jamie is a freelance writer, contributing to outlets such as The Guardian, The Times, The Telegraph, CNN and Vice, among others. He is also the creative force behind the Audible podcast Beast Master.
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