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- <text id=93TT1786>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: Orgies On-Line
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 61
- Orgies On-Line
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>It's spring on the computer networks, and X-rated sexual fantasies
- are busting out all over
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT
- </p>
- <p> By 11 p.m. the scene has begun to heat up. A man named Norm
- is nuzzling a young woman who calls herself Tricia. Tricia,
- in turn, is gently biting Brit's neck, while Annabeth flirts
- in the corner with Chaz. Then Suzi breaks in and asks Norm if
- he's looking for some real action. As if to test the waters,
- Norm gives Suzi a passionate kiss. Suzi kisses Norm back, hard.
- With no further preamble, Norm takes off Suzi's shirt. You
- can almost feel the temperature in the room start to rise.
- </p>
- <p> Except that there is no room, no shirt and, for all we know,
- no woman named Suzi. These events, and their steamy denouement,
- exist only as text messages scrolling by on a computer screen
- and as libidinous images in the mind's eye--in this case,
- the imagination of the three dozen men and women who have chosen
- this particular moment and this computer locale (the "sex" channel
- on the Internet), to exchange pseudonymous X-rated fantasies.
- Participants simply type in their best pickup lines and indicate
- what physical actions they are taking--such as kissing or
- undressing.
- </p>
- <p> It was perhaps inevitable, given the rapid growth of computer
- networks, that people would find a way to use the new communications
- technology to share their most intimate urges. Sex, as Gerard
- van der Leun writes in the new computer-hip magazine Wired,
- "is a heat-seeking missile that forever seeks out the newest
- medium for its transmission." He cites the spread of printed
- smut in post-Gutenberg Europe, pornographic pictures in the
- age of photolithography, X-rated tapes in the video stores and
- dial-a-porn services on the 900 telephone lines.
- </p>
- <p> But the action this spring is on what the Clinton Administration
- likes to call the data superhighways, and by all accounts sex
- is busting out all over. According to Jack Rickard, the editor
- of Boardwatch magazine, the number of small computer-bulletin-board
- systems in the U.S. has jumped from 30,000 last year to more
- than 46,000 this year--the majority of them offering some
- form of digital titillation. When Boardwatch ran a reader's
- poll of the best computer boards, three of the Top 10 were explicit
- "adult" systems--including Pleasure Dome, based in Tidewater,
- Virginia, which offers, among other things, electronic access
- to ThrobNet, SwingNet, StudNet and KinkNet.
- </p>
- <p> Sex on the networks comes in as many flavors as there are positions
- in the Kama Sutra. If your taste runs to explicit pictures,
- there are thousands of them on such bulletin boards as Nixpix
- in Aspen, Colorado, and Odyssey in Monrovia, California. Jim
- Maxey, a former journalist and part-time private eye who runs
- the Event Horizons system in Lake Oswego, Oregon, grossed $3.5
- million last year from computer users willing to pay $9 an hour
- to connect to his bulging database of R- and X-rated digital
- images and film loops.
- </p>
- <p> But as anybody who reads romance novels will testify, words
- can be just as exciting as pictures, and much of the sexual
- activity on the networks is strictly text only. The Internet,
- the government-sponsored data pipeline that links computer networks
- around the world, is the repository of hundreds of sexually
- explicit narratives organized, in the Internet's bizarre filing
- system, by sexual preference: sex.bestiality, sex.bondage,
- sex.fetish.feet. And nearly every network offers some form
- of "hot chat" capability, in which users attempt to turn each
- other on by composing one-line messages that appear on each
- other's computer screens as they are typed. "If you are a good
- writer, it can be quite effective," says one online Lothario.
- "It helps to be a fast and accurate typist."
- </p>
- <p> There has been, predictably, a backlash. The family-oriented
- Prodigy system closed down its "frank discussion" conference
- in January when the language got a little too frank for its
- owners (Sears and IBM). In March federal agents raided bulletin
- boards in 15 states searching for evidence that they were trafficking
- in child pornography (which, unlike most pornography, is illegal
- in the U.S.). Parents' and women's groups complain that sexually
- explicit material is still available to any youngster who can
- operate a modem. "The last thing this culture needs," writes
- Stephanie Salter in the San Francisco Examiner, "is yet another
- method for reducing women to sex objects."
- </p>
- <p> But there are women for whom netsex clearly has its attractions.
- "It's not just the ultimate in safe sex," says Patrizia DiLuc
- chio, a health-care consultant who runs the Eros conference
- on the WELL, a popular West Coast bulletin-board system. "It's
- also safe romance. It's like falling in love with a demon lover
- who knows just what you want and says all the right things."
- Several of DiLucchio's digital infatuations have blossomed
- into real-life love affairs.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, back on the Internet sex channel, the online orgy
- is winding down. Suzi and Norm have consummated their encounter,
- and the voyeurs who had gathered to watch have started to drift
- away. Hoping to rekindle some heat, one bystander tentatively
- approaches Annabeth and slips his hand under her sweater. But
- rejection in cyberspace can be uniquely swift and stinging:
- Annabeth types back that she is snapping off her suitor's sex
- organ and tossing it over her shoulder. So much for safe romance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-