From the category archives:

technology

arsebanner 300x111 Arse Elektronika San Francisco 2011 / Call for Submissions: SCREW THE SYSTEM: Sex, technology, class, and culture

The remarkable diversity of human behavior across cultures and classes also extends to sex and technology. Most discussions in this area tend to make certain assumptions about the culture, class, and race of the participants. Technologically represented sex tends to be ableist and heterocentric. Who gets left out of this, what effects does this have, and what would it look like to include them?

Is there working class, middle class and upper class porn? How does the commercial sex industry reproduce and enforce racial, gender, and class exploitation and dominance? How do people use sex and sexual technology to transgress or change social status? How can DIY porn and sex tech counter the social injustices reproduced by the commercial sex industry? Does gay porn make use of the class, race, and power tropes found in heterosexual pornography, and if so, how?

Is kinkiness a luxury? What does kink from different social classes look like? Can economic realities poison the power dynamics of a D/S relationship? What are the demographics of people admitted to hospitals with weird objects up their asses? Does activity in a swinger or BDSM scene act as bridging social capital? Are there class dynamics at work in the feminist debate over porn?

How and why do governments intervene in sexualities? When do governments shape or use sexual desire, both implicitly and explicitly? Can sex tech challenge the future of biopolitics and what Michel Foucault calls “biopower” (the subjugation of bodies and the control of populations by modern states)?

What are the labor conditions of non-Western workers who make most of the world’s sex toys? What’s the environmental footprint of a technologically assisted orgasm? How does the criminalization or stigma of sex tech production harm the communities in which it is produced? What’s the product life-cycle and planning horizon of sex tech? What are the barriers to entry for sex tech production? How important is intellectual property to sex tech, and how is it enforced?

What does production, regulation, distribution, and consumption of sex tech look like outside of North America, Western Europe, and Japan? How do state-sponsored religions or religious states interact with these issues? How do majority Muslim cultures differ from one another and from non-Muslim cultures on these issues? What’s the intersection of sex tourism and sex tech? Is Japan’s pornographic dominance in the Asian market an exception to the Korean wave? How does a country’s pornography (or lack thereof) reflect its culture? Who consumes racist pornography?

How do the class and cultural impacts of differential access to shifting reproductive technologies like IVF, surrogacy (especially international surrogates), egg and sperm donors, birth control, and abortions affect the ways people have sex and construct relationships? Do these technologies or their social deployment enforce heteronormativity? How could the sex tech industry positively impact control and awareness of STIs?

What’s the intersection of sex tech and hospitals or hospice care? Where are the sex toys for the elderly? Where are the sex toys for prisoners? What are the pornography surfing habits of homeless people in libraries? Can technology meaningfully contribute to solutions for sexual social problems like rape? Should the government allow or require masturbation aids in prisons to reduce prison rape? Should your health insurance be paying for your vibrator? How do your sex toys hurt you? What are the health risks of using everyday objects as sex toys when you can’t afford the good stuff?

Who buys sex tech? Is sex technology a luxury? Does the demand elasticity for sex tech vary across subcultures? By age, sexual orientation, race, etc? How much does the average lesbian couple spend on sex toys? What are the substitutes employed to or within sex tech if it’s unaffordable or unavailable? Is consumption of sex tech correlated with any other social significant behaviors or consumptions, positive or negative? How do distribution methods affect who consumes sex tech? How will the DIY movement change the sex tech market? Will we be able to print our on sex toys on rapid prototyping machines?

Who can afford to challenge sex tech?

Please email: office AT monochrom.at

Johannes Grenzfurthner/monochrom (Conference organizer)

  • Arse Elektronika web site
  • Arse Elektronika blog
  • Arse Elektronika on the web
  • Arse Elektronika (Wikipedia)

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09/30/2010to10/03/2010

arsebanner Arse Elektronika San Francisco 2010: Space Racy

Conference, film festival, machines, workshops and performances

A conference near and dear to my heart – I was at the first two, and my talk with Susan Mernit is in the anthology from the 2008 conference:

Love hotels. Swinger club design. Phallic architecture. The gentrification of Times Square, kicking out all the peep shows, and similar anti-sex gentrifications and battles. Kids making out in the back seats of cars, and people fucking in parks. Housing for unconventional family units. Augmented reality sex spaces. Furniture for sex. Room design. Creating new environments. Gendered spaces, and gender in the creation of space. Architecture by women, and the potential for the construction of a feminist architecture. Actively gender-segregated spaces, as both empowering and oppressing. Queer-segregated spaces, similarly. The acts of human intimacy, sexual intercourse, and procreation in weightlessness and the extreme environments of space. Erotic space tourism. The visibility of sex, genders, and relationship structures in various spaces. Spaces of sexual control and permissiveness. Sexual subcultures as spaces of social division. Spatial enforcement of relationship structures and gendered power structures. Geotagging as an expression for kinks. The sexual reading of architecture, especially around historical and modern styles and concerning ornament and detail. The eroticization of buildings — architecture for whorehouses, the Las Vegas strip, people who want to sleep with buildings. What makes design “sexy” and the construction of “sexy” as an architectural category as a comment on late heteronormativity. The terabyte gloryhole. The space in which the male gaze occurs and the space it defines.

Heterosexism, misogyny, and heterocentrism reinforce the dominant cultural structure and contribute to the oppression of large sectors of society. Sexuality, sex, gender, and related constructs are heavily implicated in and reproduce space, and are also constrained and restricted by it and by heterosexism. Let’s explore this space of interactions

Johannes Grenzfurthner/monochrom (Conference organizer)

  • Arse Elektronika web site
  • Speakers
  • Schedule
  • Talk Abstracts
  • Arse Elektronika on the web
  • Facebook invite

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robotlove2000 Love in the Year 2000

[via riotclitshave]

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arse Arse Elektronika 2008: A conference dealing with sex, technology and science fiction.

Arse Elektronika 2008

ARSE ELEKTRONIKA 2008

Do Androids Sleep With Electric Sheep?

September 25-28, 2008
San Francisco, USA

A conference dealing with sex, technology and science fiction.
Featuring the Prixxx Arse Elektronika 2008 Awards Ceremony (an unobjectionable award for sex machines, orgasmotrons and teledildonics), the presentation of the Arse Elektronika Anthology “pr0nnovation?” (about pornography and technological innovation), a curated erotic reading about sex in SF/speculative/alt-reality fiction and — of course — a three day conference about critical perspectives on sexuality and pornography in science and social fiction (with keynote speeches by Rudy Rucker and Constance Penley).
Taking up where the successful conference in autumn 2007 left off, this year’s Arse Elektronika stands under the motto “future” — and the ways in which the present sees itself reflected in it. Maintaining a broadened perspective on technical development and technology while also putting special emphasis on its social implementation, this year’s conference focuses on Science and Social Fiction. The genre of the “fantastic” is especially well suited to the investigation of the touchy area of sexuality and pornography: actual and assumed developments are frequently depicted positively and approvingly, but just as often with dystopian admonishment. Here the classic, and continuingly valid, themes of modernism represent a clear link between the two aspects: questions of science, research and technologization are of interest, as is the complex surrounding urbanism, artificiality and control (or the loss of control). Depictions of the future, irregardless of the form they ta! ke, always address the present as well. Imaginations of the fantastic and the nightmarish give rise to a thematic overlapping of the exotic, the alienating and, of course, the pornographic/sexual as well.

Registration

Prixxx Arse Elektronika 2008 Awards Ceremony

(@ CELLspace / 2050 Bryant Street, San Francisco / September 25 / 8pm, doors open at 7pm)

An unobjectionable award for sex machines, orgasmotrons and teledildonics.
Hosted by monochrom’s Johannes Grenzfurthner and info maniac David Dempsey. Featuring Annalee Newitz, Jonathan Mann aka GameJew, and many other human and non-human guest stars.

The winners will be honored with the “Golden Kleene”(*).
Prixxx Arse Elektronika 2008 will be a dignified occasion — and so we invite you to dress up properly. Surprise us with sex and science fiction related costumes… and maybe win a “Golden Kleene”(*) yourself!

(*)
There was a young man named Kleene
Who invented a fucking machine.
Concave or convex,
It fit either sex,
And was remarkably easy to clean!

(Limerick, attributed to John von Neumann)

Presentation of Arse Elektronika Anthology: pr0nnovation?
(@ CELLspace / 2050 Bryant Street, San Francisco / September 25 / 8pm, doors open at 7pm)

It is our pleasure and privilege to present you with the first Arse Elektronika Anthology: pr0nnovation?

From the depiction of a vulva in a cave painting to the newest internet porno, technology and sexuality have always been closely linked. No one can predict what the future will bring, but history indicates that sex will continue to play an essential role in technological development. Is it going too far to assume that research in nanotechnology and genetic engineering will be influenced by our sexual needs? The question is not whether these technologies alter humanity, but how they do so.

Edited by Johannes Grenzfurthner, Gunther Friesinger, Daniel Fabry.
Published by RE/Search Publications (San Francisco) in cooperation with monochrom.

Featuring: Michael Achenbach, Timothy Archibald, Peter Asaro, Thomas Ballhausen, Binx, Violet Blue, Jonathan Coopersmith, Mark Dery, Thomas Edlinger, Johannes Grenzfurthner, Ema Konstantinova, Tina Lorenz, Stefan Lutschinger, Kyle Machulis, Aaron Muszalski, Annalee Newitz, Carol Queen, Thomas Roche, Autumn Tyr-Salvia, Frank Apunkt Schneider, Katie Vann, Rose White, Amanda Williams, Katherina Zakravsky.


Arse Elektronika Conference

(@ CELLspace / 2050 Bryant Street, San Francisco / September 26-28 / 1pm – 8pm, doors open at 12am)

“Do Androids Sleep With Electric Sheep?”
Critical Perspectives on Sexuality and Pornography in Science and Social Fiction

This year’s conference will be structured around three day-long talks and discussion panels, each devoted to a specific theme.

Featuring: Violet Blue, Jason Brown, Reesa Brown, Simone Davalos, Daniel Fabry, Karin Harrasser, Richard Kadrey, Verena Kuni, Isaac Leung, Mela Mikes, Susan Mernit, Chris Noessel, Kit O’Connell, Jens Ohlig, Constance Penley, Bonni Rambatan, Bonnie Ruberg, Rudy Rucker, Mae Saslaw, Nathan Shedroff, Viviane, Rose White, Sharing is Sexy (Scruffy Eudora, DJ Lotu5, J Bird), and many others.

Arse Elektronika Reading
(@ Center for Sex & Culture / 1519 Mission Street near 11th, San Francisco / September 26 / 9pm, doors open at 8 pm)

Carol Queen, with the support of the Center for Sex & Culture and cosponsorship of San Francisco’s premiere SF/fantasy bookstore Borderlands, presents a curated erotic reading evening, featuring writers who commonly explore sexual themes in their science fiction and alt-reality fiction work. While the focus of much of the conference will be a critical deconstruction of sexual tropes in SF/speculative/alt-reality fiction, the focus of this event will be to appreciate and celebrate the fiction itself. Readers include Rudy Rucker, Richard Kadrey, M. Christian, Steven Schwartz, Charlie Anders, Carol Queen, Thomas Roche, and more.

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arse Arse Elektronika 2008

Arse Elektronika 2008 — “Do Androids Sleep with Electric Sheep?” — will take place at CELLspace (San Francisco). September 25 thru 28, 2008.

Susan Mernit and I will be doing a panel:

Avoiding the Emily Gould Effect
Susan Mernit & Viviane

“Oversharing”, sex blogging & erotica. How to successfully manage your online identity, whether you’re pseudonymous or right out there. As the legions of bloggers sharing personal stories of sexuality, erotica and adventure grow and as sex & relationship blogs become big business we hear both stories of bloggers who regret what they’ve shared (Emily Gould) and survived a tawdry outing (Zoe Margolis), and those who’ve parlayed sex & erotica blogging into far more mainstream careers (Rachel Kramer Bussel, Melissa Gira Grant, Violet Blue. How do you manage your online persona so you’re in control of your story? What to do if you get outed?  Join Viviane, leader of The Sex Carnival, and Susan Mernit, sex and relationships contributing editor at Blogher, in a discussion of sharing, oversharing, and the best ways to put it out there. A hand out of tips for beginners and getting started will also be provided.

Full schedule here.

About AE

Critical Perspectives on Sexuality and Pornography in Science and Social Fiction

Taking up where the successful conference in autumn 2007 left off, this year’s Arse Elektronika stands under the motto “future” — and the ways in which the present sees itself reflected in it. Maintaining a broadened perspective on technical development and technology while also putting special emphasis on its social implementation, this year’s conference focuses on Science and Social Fiction.

The genre of the “fantastic” is especially well suited to the investigation of the touchy area of sexuality and pornography: actual and assumed developments are frequently depicted positively and approvingly, but just as often with dystopian admonishment. Here the classic, and continuingly valid, themes of modernism represent a clear link between the two aspects: questions of science, research and technologization are of interest, as is the complex surrounding urbanism, artificiality and control (or the loss of control). Depictions of the future, irregardless of the form they take, always address the present as well. Imaginations of the fantastic and the nightmarish give rise to a thematic overlapping of the exotic, the alienating and, of course, the pornographic/sexual as well.

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Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

ITP is a two-year graduate program located in the Tisch School of the Arts whose mission is to explore the imaginative use of communications technologies — how they might augment, improve, and bring delight and art into people’s lives.

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U R dumped–one in seven say they have suffered the same fate as Britney Spears’ ex-husband and been told it’s all over via text message or e-mail, a survey said on Friday.

While hiding behind technology might appear a cowardly way of splitting up, it contrasts with the 4 percent who simply drop all communication with their lovers without notice.

“Most of us send e-mails and texts everyday, so it comes as no surprise they are now being used to ditch someone–however distasteful this is,” said Rob Barnes from Moneysupermarket.com, which carried out the survey.

“The results show 1 percent of the population would use a social-networking site to dump a partner. It would be interesting to see how this changes as sites such as Facebook and MySpace become more apparent in our everyday lives.”

One of the most high-profile victims of dumping by text was Kevin Federline, who reportedly received news that pop singer Spears was filing for divorce while being filmed for a television show.

The survey said 15 percent of the 2,194 people questioned had been dumped by text or e-mail, although a quarter of those in the most tech-savvy 18- to 24-year-old age group would choose the traditional method–a letter.

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  • (tags: culture)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07 sex technology)

  • Violet Blue inter interviewed Eon McKai about altporn.

    (tags: arseelektronika07 violetblue eonmckai)

  • Organizers of Arse Elektronika 07

    (tags: arseelektronika07 sex technology)

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  • Could the next frontier of gadget interface design be modeled after female sexual arousal?

    (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • Sponsor of Arse Elektronika 2007

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  • A conference about pornography and technological innovation, Oct. 5-7, 2007, Porn Palace, San Francisco

    (tags: arseelektronika07 san+francisco events sex technology)

  • Timothy Archibald’s blog

    (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07 sex technology)

  • Director of the “Love Machine” documentary. An independently produced feature length documentary on the development of robots capable of entering human social relations of love and caring

    (tags: arseelektronika07 robots sex technology)

  • Thomas Ballhausen is Head of Studies Department at the Austrian Film Archive, lecturer for Film-, Media- and Literature-Studies at the Vienna University

    (tags: arseelektronika07 sex technology)

  • VaginaPagina is an online community that offers a supportive, progressive, body- and sex-positive environment in which to discuss issues related to female sexual and reproductive health and wellness

    (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07)

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  • This website is a nodocentric approach to my distributed activities in the fields of Philosophy and Cyberculture.

    (tags: arseelektronika07 sex technology)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07 kylemachulis sex technology)

  • Slashdong is about the cominbation of sex and technology.

    (tags: arseelektronika07 kylemachulis)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07 sex)

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  • Katie Vann is a social theorist and organizational ethnographer working with the Virtual Knowledge Studio in Amsterdam and with the Center for Science, Technology and Society at Santa Clara University.

    (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • (tags: arseelektronika07)

  • Autumn sat in the front row and live blogged almost the entire Arse Elektronika conference.

    (tags: arseelektronika07 sex)

  • Metaphorgee and Autumn covered AE for Scarleteen. He also set up the Flick AE photo pool

    (tags: arseelektronika07)

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 Off to San Francisco

I’ll be in San Francisco until Monday night. I’ll be at Arse Elektronika. I’ll have wireless, but it’ll only be for email. Text me if you want/need to.

If I do any liveblogging, it’ll be on Twitter, so follow me at http://twitter.com/viviane212

Stuff from the conference will be posted when I get back.

A bientot, sweeties.

  • Arse Elektronika
  • AE on Pownce
  • AE on AVN
  • AE on Fleshbot
  • Johannes of Monochrom(organizer) on Twitter
  • Violet Blue’s Open Source Sex column (SF Chronicle)

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shesgeeky Conference: Shes Geeky

My friend Susan Mernit is one of the organizers for the She’s Geeky conference:

She’s Geeky: A Women’s Tech (un)conference
Date: October 22-23 in Mountain View, CA.
What: The She’s Geeky (un)conference will provide an agenda-free and friendly environment for women who not only care about building technology that is useful for people, but who also want to encourage more women to get involved.

It is designed to provide women who self-identify as geeky and who are engaged in various technology-focused disciplines with a gathering space in which they can exchange skills and discuss ideas and form community across and within disciplines.

Our goal is to create an open space forum for women in tech to come together to:

1. Exchange skills and learning from women from diverse fields of technology.
2. Discuss topics about women and technology.
3. Connect the diverse range of women in technology, computing, entrepreneurship, funding, hardware, open source, nonprofit and any other technical geeky field.

This is an unconference so it will have an agenda created by the people who attend.

For more info, visit the She’s Geeky website.

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The eight women visited Long Island this summer along with vacationing families and other business travelers, staying in hotels and motels in commercial strips in middle-class suburbs like East Garden City, Hicksville and Woodbury. Their ages ranged from 20 to 32.

Three had come all the way from the San Francisco Bay area, one from Miami. Two lived less than 60 miles away, in Newark and Elizabeth, N.J. and two even closer, in Brooklyn.

All eight were arrested on prostitution charges here, snared in a new sting operation by the Nassau County police that focuses on Craigslist.org, the ubiquitous Web site best known for its employment and for-sale advertisements but which law enforcement officials say is increasingly also used to trade sex for money.

Nassau County has made more than 70 arrests since it began focusing on Craigslist last year, one of numerous crackdowns by vice squads from Hawaii to New Hampshire that have lately been monitoring the Web site closely, sometimes placing decoy ads to catch would-be customers.

“Craigslist has become the high-tech 42nd Street, where much of the solicitation takes place now,” said Richard McGuire, Nassau’s assistant chief of detectives. “Technology has worked its way into every profession, including the oldest.”

(more . . . )

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Scenario: You’re eighteen (of course you are) and just had awesome sex with your girlfriend. Oops, the condom broke, or you didn’t use one or you tossed it off halfway through. Whatever; it’s happened to lots of us. You’re not sure what to do, and scared or embarrassed or whatever to go to the health clinic and ask someone.

No worries, man. Grab your mobile phone and send a text to SexInfo (sextextsf.org), a sexual health information site for teens in San Francisco. The site was created by the advisory board of ISIS (Internet Sexuality Information Services) and funded by the San Francisco Department of Public Health. You’ll get a response on your phone or PDA (in 160 characters, duh), giving you information and instructions on minimizing risks for yourself and your partners.

Give it a go: Send the message “sexinfo” to (917) 957-4280 on San Francisco MetroPCS phones or 61827 on all other cell phones to try it. Standard text messaging rates apply.

ISIS was founded in 2001 by Deb Levine, also the founder of Columbia University’s Go Ask Alice column, in order to use emerging Internet technology to further the reach of public health resources, specifically sexual health. The organization’s mission is to “provide leadership, innovation, educational resources and research in online sexual health promotion.” ISIS’s other sites include inSPOT.org, an anonymous way for people to inform their partners of STI exposure, and STDTest.org, where people can retrieve lab results of their STI screens.

Also, can I just say, big props to the City of San Francisco for hopping on board with Deb and her projects. I read about SexInfo a while ago (I think via Violet Blue, though searches of TinyNibbles, Fleshbot and Techyum yielded no results) and thought, “How awesome and geeky: harnessing the power of teh innernets to fight injustice, infections and misinformation!”

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Nearly one in four teens communicated hourly with his or her partner by cell phone or text messaging between midnight and 5 a.m., according to a survey conducted by Teenage Research Unlimited, a research organization specializing in research on teens and young adults.

Shaina Weisbrot, now a sophomore at Rutgers University, says as a teenager she was in a controlling relationship that eventually turned violent. She recalls staying on the phone until 5 a.m. some nights, arguing with her boyfriend. “I’d be in my room. I’d pretend to be sleeping. I’d shut the lights and I’d be quiet, and no one would know the difference because all you had to do was hide your cell phone.”

About one in three teens surveyed who have been in a relationship said their partner had text messaged them 10, 20 and up to 30 times per hour to find out where they are, what they’re doing, or who they’re with.

Dr. Jill Murray, a psychologist who specializes in teen relationship violence, says that kind of questioning goes beyond casual conversation and amounts to controlling behavior. “The technology sets up the opportunity for constant stalking, for constant communication, for constant intimidation and threatening behavior, ” Murray said at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. “So we’re seeing an increase in teen dating abuse and I believe that this is a good part of it.”

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“Omagawd! Now we’re going to see that pornstars have pimples and razor burn!”

Apparently that’s news enough for the New York Times to run yet another late to the party, misinformed and disinforming story about porn. Again I’m left wondering just what sort of porn the article’s author has been watching that the fact that you can see razor burns, pimples and celulite is news. Again I’m left with the suspicion that this in more of the mainstream media freebasing porn with precious little interest in the real story, or even the basic facts.

(more…)

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