An Australian teenager has pleaded guilty to creating deepfake pornography, in a landmark case. William Hamish Yeates, 19, is the first person to be charged under a new national law which criminalises ...
The Indianapolis Star: Teens who made deepfake porn of classmates were just sentenced. Will it make a difference?
The two Lancaster teenagers who made deepfake porn of 60 girls were just sentenced. Will their case make a difference?
Teens who made deepfake porn of classmates were just sentenced. Will it make a difference?
The New York Times: Ohio Man Is First to Be Federally Convicted for Deepfake Porn
Congress passed the Take It Down Act in 2024, protecting victims of deepfake revenge pornography. Now, Germany is considering punishing the creators of deepfake porn, not just the distributors, for up ...
BBC on MSN: How deepfake porn scandal surrounding TV star rocked Germany
An Ohio man became the first person to be convicted under a 2025 federal law on revenge porn that also made publishing pornographic deepfakes a crime, federal prosecutors announced on Tuesday.
Crafting laws to push back on deepfake porn has proven difficult. Already, civil liberty groups warn some regulations infringe on free speech.
Learn where the law stands when it comes to criminalizing deepfake porn at the federal and state levels and the challenges faced by prosecutors and victims.
The Senate passed legislation Tuesday to allow victims of nonconsensual deepfake pornography to sue the producers and distributors of such content. The proposal was put forward by Democratic Whip ...
The Take It Down Act unanimously passed the Senate and is now headed for the House. Across the political spectrum, lawmakers generally agree that deepfake porn, in which generative AI renders a ...