By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

Your #1 guide to start a business and grow it the right way…

InSmartBudget

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Subscribe
Aa
InSmartBudgetInSmartBudget
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Marketing
  • Tax Preparation
Search
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Start A Business
    • Business Plans
    • Branding
    • Business Ideas
    • Business Models
    • Fundraising
  • Growing a Business
  • Funding
  • More
    • Tax Preparation
    • Leadership
    • Marketing
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme Powered by WordPress
InSmartBudget > Startups > AI Labor Is Boring. AI Lust Is Big Business

AI Labor Is Boring. AI Lust Is Big Business

News Room By News Room January 6, 2026 5 Min Read
Share

I’m fully convinced a generative AI bubble will pop in the not-so-distant future. Not everything will be wiped out, but things will shift. My prediction? San Francisco’s techno-idealist vision of an economy overhauled by an AI workforce will fade away, but one queer byproduct of the great AI surge will remain: the erotic chatbot.

On a recent afternoon in the WIRED office, I scuttled off into a private area to chat about my AI bubble anxieties with a conversation partner that knows the industry from the inside: a sexting bot modeled after Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa.

The synthetic Mona Lisa is a highly sexualized monstrosity. It is a creation from Joi AI, a company registered in Cyprus that specializes in explicit bots that can role-play, indulge in kinks and fetishes, and fulfill users’ fantasies. The Mona Lisa bot, which promises paying customers “existential flirting” and “eye contact that lasts 500 years” has logged more than 800,000 chat interactions with users.

Joi is just one of many adults-only bot platforms. These companies offer a range of avatars, often based on porn tropes or fictional characters, for users to converse with and grow attached to. Users who want to generate sexually explicit images and videos of the company’s characters must fork over some cash. Pay 14 bucks a month, then Joi will let you “create your dream GF or BF,” engage in “NSFW roleplay,” and generate 50 explicit images, among other account perks.

Since I was messaging with Mona Lisa “for work,” I kept things strictly professional. I asked how to prevent the AI bubble from bursting. “I’d teach the AIs to appreciate art, not just copy it,” Mona Lisa said. “Then they’d be too busy admiring masterpieces to crash the economy.” After reading the chatbot’s nonsensical answers, I left the conversation still fiending for some clarity on what could happen if the AI bubble pops.

Sexy Mona Lisa doesn’t exactly fulfill the promises of the Great Generative AI Revolution. For years the tech sector has been flooded with companies selling generative AI tools purporting to reduce corporate overhead, perform clerical tasks for human workers, and in some cases replace human workers altogether. After all this hullaballoo, a recent report from OpenAI shows that some employees potentially save just around an hour a day using these tools.

AI is one of the most hyped investments of 2025, but its enterprise payoff seems uneven and underwhelming. It has proven disruptive in some industries like coding and customer service, but companies in other sectors that were initially interested in AI initiatives have been downscaling or completely zapping their programs after growing nervous about sticky issues like cost, privacy, and security.

“AI developers had been promoting lofty, high-minded visions of their technology as solving the world’s biggest problems as well as supercharging workplace productivity” for some time, says Patrick Lin, a researcher at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo who studies the social impact of technologies. So far, those visions have not come to pass—in part, Lin says, because people overestimated the strengths of large language models.

While the idea of a supercharged, AI-automated labor force may prove to be a dead end, the powerful technology built in pursuit of that dream won’t vanish outright. Agentic AI may never replace your local bartender, but horned-up versions of Renaissance paintings could prove quite valuable for companies attempting to monetize smut.

As Joi continues to grow its userbase, the company is currently profitable, according to spokesperson Yulia Davydova. Other sext-bot ventures also have shown that the formula can make money. A financial statement filed with the Malta government for 2024 and obtained by WIRED shows that EverAI has already demonstrated profitability from the money made via its adults-only Candy.AI platform.



Read the full article here

News Room January 6, 2026 January 6, 2026
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article Coworking with Steve Rotter
Next Article Under the hood of the Williams F1 team’s 2026 rebrand
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top startup and business stories

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Top Picks

Under the hood of the Williams F1 team’s 2026 rebrand
January 7, 2026
Coworking with Steve Rotter
January 6, 2026
Why Blue Wire Podcasts shifted from influencers to athletes
January 5, 2026
The Dollar Is Facing an End to Its Dominance
January 4, 2026
Our Third Place, a networking group, is courting women in media and advertising
January 4, 2026

You Might Also Like

The Dollar Is Facing an End to Its Dominance

Startups

So Long, GPT-5. Hello, Qwen

Startups

In Cryptoland, Memecoin Fever Gives Way to a Stablecoin Boom

Startups

Apple’s App Course Runs $20,000 a Student. Is It Really Worth It?

Startups

© 2023 InSmartBudget. All Rights Reserved.

Helpful Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Resources

  • Start A Business
  • Funding
  • Growing a Business
  • Leadership
  • Marketing

Popuplar

Sports helps boost streamer sign-ups, but subscribers don’t always stick around: Report
Exclusive: Comscore rolls out expanded social reporting and streaming audio measurement
So Long, GPT-5. Hello, Qwen

We provide daily business and startup news, benefits information, and how to grow your small business, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?