Ministers to crack down on deepfakes and sharing of illicit intimate images
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Ministers are to crack down on sexually explicit deepfake images, as the practice will become a criminal offence. Those who take intimate images of other people without their consent, or who install equipment to take these pictures, could meanwhile face up to two years behind bars under new offences.
Justice minister Alex Davies-Jones said perpetrators of the new offences would “face the full force of the law”. While we welcome this announcement, we are yet to see a timeline for the offence or any details about the new law, which will be crucial to how effective it is.
Deepfakes are images generated or edited using artificial intelligence featuring real people. The number of these false images has spread widely in recent years, and they can often be explicit in nature. With the new deepfakes offence, the Government will target people who are both creating and sharing these images.
This builds on offences aimed at clamping down on the sharing of intimate images, including deepfakes, introduced in 2023. Plans to outlaw the taking of intimate images without consent will meanwhile streamline existing laws, which have been described as a “patchwork” by the Law Commission.
Ms Davies-Jones said: “It is unacceptable that one in three women have been victims of online abuse. “This demeaning and disgusting form of chauvinism must not become normalised, and as part of our Plan for Change we are bearing down on violence against women – whatever form it takes.