Britain to make sexually explicit 'deepfakes' a crime

Britain to criminalize deepfake creation, share of intimate images, with up to 2 years in prison.


AFP January 08, 2025
A combination photograph showing an image purporting to be of British student and freelance writer Oliver Taylor (L) and a heat map of the same photograph produced by Tel Aviv-based deepfake detection company Cyabra is seen in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters. The heat map, which was produced using one of Cyabra's algorithms, highlights areas of suspected computer manipulation. The digital inconsistencies were one of several indicators used by experts to determine that Taylor was an online mirage. PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON:

Britain plans to criminally charge people who create and share sexually explicit deepfake images to better protect women and girls, a minister said on Tuesday.

The government also plans to designate taking intimate images without consent and installing equipment to that end as new offences, with perpetrators facing up to two years in prison, the Ministry of Justice said.

It is already an offence in the UK to share or threaten to share intimate images, including deepfakes. But currently it is only an offence to create an image without consent in certain circumstances, such as so-called upskirting. Victims minister Alex Davies-Jones said "there are current gaps" in the law that the government was responding to.

"We're making it more robust to protect women and girls," she told Sky News, adding one in three women in the UK were victims of intimate images of them being made or shared in so-called "revenge porn" attacks. "It's awful. It's horrific. It really, really makes women vulnerable, intimidates them, and these perpetrators of these crimes deserve to feel the full force of the law."

The justice ministry noted "hyper-realistic" deepfakes have proliferated at "an alarming rate" in recent years, "causing devastating harm to victims".

Deepfakes are images generated or edited using artificial intelligence (AI) featuring real people.

Experts warn an online boom in these non-consensual deepfakes is outpacing efforts to regulate the technology globally, with a proliferation of cheap AI tools including photo apps digitally undressing women.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner was among more than 30 British female politicians found to be targeted by a deepfake porn website, according to a Channel 4 investigation published last year

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