Deepfake Desperados: UK Cracks Down on Digital Depravity with New Law
The British government is cracking down on the creation of sexually explicit deepfakes, threatening up to two years in jail. This move aims to fight online abuse, especially against women. However, experts warn that catching deepfake creators might be harder than finding a needle in a haystack made of digital deception.

Hot Take:
Well, it looks like the British government has decided to throw down the gauntlet against those pesky deepfake creators. Two years in the slammer for making a digital doppelgänger do the dirty? Sounds like a plot twist in a Black Mirror episode. But hey, if you’re going to manipulate pixels for nefarious purposes, maybe it’s time for a pixelated prison cell. Let’s see if this new law can keep up with the fast and furious world of AI trickery, or if it’ll just be another episode of “What Could Possibly Go Wrong?”
Key Points:
- The British government plans to criminalize the creation of sexually explicit deepfakes, with penalties of up to two years in prison.
- It’s already illegal to share intimate images, including deepfakes, under the Online Safety Act 2023.
- The new laws aim to target not just sharing but also creating and recording intimate content without consent.
- AI-generated explicit images are often used for online abuse and extortion.
- Some experts doubt the effectiveness of the new law due to the rapid advancement of deepfake technology and the anonymity of creators.