Regina Lynn

Her work discusses the convergence of sex and technology, touching on subjects ranging from teledildonics and online dating to social media, video games, and cybersex.

"Sex Drive" was an opinion column that attempted to use humor and a personal voice to make sex-tech more accessible to a mainstream audience.

I’ve seen so much written about Internet infidelity, pedophiles using chat rooms to lure kids out to piers, CEOs and priests with porn on their hard drives.

"Sex Drive" commented on current events such as obscenity lawsuits,[2] teachers losing their jobs due to their online sexual expression,[3] and the impact of webcam-savvy women on traditional porn studios.

Robert Bloomfield and Benjamin Duranske cited two of Lynn's columns in their paper "Protecting Children in Virtual Worlds Without Undermining Their Economic, Educational, and Social Benefits,"[8] published in the Washington and Lee Law Review volume 66-3.

In "The 10 Real Reasons Why Geeks Make Better Lovers",[12] Lynn tried to counter the stereotype that "computer nerds" were too socially inept to have relationships.

One of the themes that runs through her work is that technology offers people the opportunity to explore sexuality and to learn about themselves at their own pace, without the shame or fear imposed by cultural inhibitions or standards.

She opened the column with "You're the perfect person to grant permission," my friend tells me, "for the exact reason that you don't get why people ask for it."

[18] After commenting on each news story, Lynn wrote: For all that I have broadened my horizons since the first Sex Drive column more than four years ago, I have yet to encounter anything that challenges my core belief: Relationships are real wherever they form.

The suggestions range from solo activities to role-playing in virtual worlds to ways to deepen intimacy and connection for partners who are already dating, living together, or in a long-distance relationship.

She participated in the "open source" online documentary Digital Tipping Point Archived 2009-01-18 at the Wayback Machine by Christian Einfeldt.