Being a woman online is scary. In the digital world, as in the real world, harassment and abuse affects women and people of marginalised genders every day.
What happened to Taylor Swift this week is a prime — and terrifying — example. AI-generated, pornographic images of Swift went viral on X (formerly Twitter), with one such post garnering over than 45 million views. Outraged fans quickly intervened, flooding the platform with positive posts and images of the singer attached to search terms like "Taylor Swift AI" and "Taylor Swift deepfake". Swift's dedicated fanbase also got the hashtag #ProtectTaylorSwift trending, with thousands of posts condemning the nonconsensual images.
Tweet may have been deleted
The incident certainly isn't an isolated one. Swift, one of the most recognizable figures on the planet, is the latest to have deepfakes weaponized against her. This has happened to K-pop stars, TikTok creators, journalists, and high school girls.
SEE ALSO: Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez deepfakes used in Le Creuset giveaway scamDeepfake porn is artificially-created images or videos generated by a specific kind of machine learning. These synthetic visuals depict people's likenesses superimposed into sexual acts without their consent. The act of sharing it is a form of image-based sexual abuse, and has been criminalized in some countries. Much like revenge porn, deepfake porn has caused harm for those it depicts, whether psychologically, personally, or professionally.
A 2023 study from Home Security Heroes, a research firm focusing on identity theft and digital harm, found that deepfake porn makes up 98 percent of all deepfake videos online. Further, 99 percent of deepfake targets are women.
When it comes to nonconsensual sharing of explicit images, some countries worldwide have or are implementing laws to protect survivors.
In England and Wales, sharing deepfake porn has been criminalized since June 2023, with the UK government announcing a crackdown on "abusers, predators and bitter ex-partners who share intimate images online without consent of those depicted."
In the U.S., 48 states and the District of Columbia currently have anti-revenge porn laws. Some states have been working to update their language to include deepfake porn under this umbrella, including Illinois, Virginia, New York, and California. However, regulations vary by state and, as some have pointed out, certain laws don't include the pressing issue of technology's role in the creation and proliferation of such images and videos.
However, many governments are failing to tackle the problem. "Most governments aren’t taking action. Most don’t have laws, or their laws are full of loopholes," according to #MyImageMyChoice, a campaign dedicated to amplifying the voices of those who have encountered image-based sexual abuse. "Most countries don’t have a framework around who is responsible for policing online spaces."
X, where the pictures of Swift have been distributed widely, explicitly forbids sharing "synthetic, manipulated, or out-of-context media." This includes content that deliberately intends to "deceive people" or those that falsely claim to depict reality. The company says it has a "a zero-tolerance policy towards such content", according to a post from its official safety account.
Tweet may have been deleted
Other platforms, like Reddit, also have policies preventing the sharing of intimate or sexually-explicit media without a person's consent.
Social media platforms and Big Tech have been put to the test when it comes to detecting and preventing deepfakes, despite policies. In 2021, Meta implemented a new tool to do so, partnering with the UK Revenge Porn Helpline's platform StopNCII.org. More recently, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram announced that any digitally-altered images pertaining to social, electoral, and political issues must be labelled — a policy intended to protect upcoming elections that some of the world's biggest democracies are gearing up towards.
Many platforms struggle to contain such content. The images of Swift, notably, were created and spread on a Telegram group chat, as discovered by 404Media. Telegram has failed to prevent this kind of content in the past. Others have too: just this month, NBC News found that nonconsensual deepfake porn featuring the likeness of female celebrities appears at the top of search engines like Google and Microsoft’s Bing.
Here's the real question: how does this keep happening?The alarming reality is that AI-generated images are becoming more pervasive, and presenting new dangers to those they depict. Exacerbating this issue is murky legal ground, social media platforms that have failed to foster effective safeguards, and the ongoing rise of artificial intelligence. International women's rights organization Equality Now detailed these factors in a January 2024 report, calling for "urgent and comprehensive responses from technological innovation, legal reform, and societal awareness" to tackle the undeniable rise of deepfake porn.
The circumstances surrounding Swift's case highlights the reality that this can happen to just about anyone – and before this kind of digital crisis worsens, it's time for a change.
If you have experienced sexual abuse, if you are based in the U.S., call the free, confidential National Sexual Assault hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), or access the 24-7 help online by visiting online.rainn.org. If you have had intimate images shared without your consent, call the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative’s 24/7 hotline at 844-878-2274for free, confidential support. The CCRI website also includes helpful informationas well as a list of international resources.
If you are based in the UK and have experienced intimate image abuse (aka revenge porn), you can contact the Revenge Porn Helplineon 0345 6000 459.If you have experienced sexual violence and are based in the UK, call the Rape Crisis helpline0808 802 9999.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Taylor Swift deepfakes have gone viral. How does this keep happening?-叶瘦花残网
sitemap
文章
3
浏览
446
获赞
241
Facebook tells employees they can work from home until July 2021
Facebook employees will be allowed to work from home for nearly one more year due to the coronavirusHuawei CFO arrested, faces extradition to U.S.
Huawei's relationship with the U.S. just took a turn for the worse. Several months after Donald TrumBest tech gifts under $20
OK, you've already bought your big-ticket items for the holidays, but what about your coworkers, theApple shares stop trading ahead of bad financial news
New year, new you. Or, in the case of Apple, new drastically reduced revenue projections for the firApple's iPhone 12 studio lets you mix and match iPhone colors and accessories
Unsure which iPhone 12 color would match best with a Saddle Brown MagSafe Wallet? Apple has a fix.OvMichelle Obama shared the sweetest throwback Instagram for her mother's birthday
No matter your place in the history books, you're never to important to share a little love for your'123456,' 'donald,' and other terrible passwords people used this year
For what seems like the umpteenth time, "123456" and "password" are the most commonly used passwordsApple's iPhone XR is winning over Android users: report
Apple may be experiencing a slump in demandfor its latest iPhone models, but it iswinning over one vMobile Messaging Clients Compared
Feature-by-feature rundown, PLUS a look at the top contenders' data policiesMobile messaging is hugeAmericans over 65 share the most fake news, study says
The only people left on Facebook are the people who are worst at using it.A new study from PrincetonEthereum upgrade delayed over security vulnerability
Ethereum's Constantinople upgrade, which was supposed to kick in on Thursday, Jan 16, is getting delImpossible Burger 2.0 taste test: Simulated meat gets an upgrade
Impossible Foods is throwing a new party in your mouth, and this time everyone really is invited.TheTwitter is developing a new misinfo moderation tool called Birdwatch
The President of the United States is in the hospital with COVID-19 — and no one can seem to aAndroid Auto makes it easier to stream music, read messages on the go
Apple's CarPlay made a splash when it announced that Google Maps, Waze, and other third-party navigaTurn your Roomba's trip around the house into a playable 'Doom' map
Once your Roomba is done tidying the house, you can clean up your enemies in hell.Game programmer an