Faked sexually-explicit images of global megastar and singer Taylor Swift have spread through the internet and prompted outrage this week, highlighting how rapidly an explicit image doctored by artificial intelligence can spread.
It's an unfolding controversy that also shows how few clear legal protections exist for victims in a world where AI has burst on the scene in only a few short years and can generate images of nearly anything without the consent of people depicted.
USA TODAY was only able to identify 10 states that have passed laws banning exploitative deepfake pornography, or AI-generated images, audio files or videos with sexual content. There is no federal law regulating it.
That means the question of whether the depictions are actually against the law is messy, and leaves victims like Swift many confusing options.
It's possible that the faked images could result in criminal charges, but it's more likely that victims get justice by suing companies involved in the images' creation or proliferation. That's according to Carrie Goldberg, a victims’ rights attorney who has taken on tech companies and represented clients who were victims of nonconsensual porn, stalking and harassment and, now, deepfake pornography.
Goldberg also notes that lawsuits are a much more practical solution for a wealthy celebrity than they are for someone with less influence, who might also be the victim of deepfake porn.
As the technology to create deepfakes only became available in 2017, legal remedies are still being created and little has been settled as to what, exactly is illegal.
On Friday, USA TODAY was only able to find 10 states which appear to have laws that specifically address the issue of pornographic deepfakes. The earliest law, in Virginia, dates from 2019.
A small number of states have existing laws about the nonconsensual distribution of pornography – or “revenge porn” – that may also cover AI-generated pornography, said Goldberg.
But for many states, those laws are written in a way that implies the images must be of the victim’s own private body parts, not parts that are generated by AI.
This means that for now, the only states where deepfake victims have specific legal remedies are these:
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Even with 10 states having laws on the books covering deepfake porn, criminal laws may not be the most practical solution for a victim, said Goldberg.
For one thing, law enforcement would have to prioritize investigating a case, and for another, it can be a big web of perpetrators to track down from whoever created the content to anybody who shared it.
Her focus as an attorney would be on going after the AI product – the company or platform that was used to create the deepfake porn – and the tech platforms that enabled its use, such as app stores where the product could be downloaded, and possibly even social media companies where the imagery is shared.
Taylor Swift could sue such companies or platforms, Goldberg said.
Tennessee, where Swift lives, doesn’t have a law explicitly banning deepfake porn. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee proposed one earlier this month. Called the Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security (ELVIS) Act, it would update the state's Protection of Personal Rights law to include protections for songwriters, performers, and music industry professionals’ voice from the misuse of artificial intelligence and would also include pornographic deepfakes.
In Swift's case, the star also spends a lot of time in New York, and New York does have both criminal and civil options for victims. Even without the criminal laws, she could sue civilly, focusing on the misappropriation of her likeness.
Even if it turned out that the perpetrators were not in the U.S., Swift’s massive power and influence could help her in that case, too. Goldberg said she represented a celebrity a few years ago whose image was superimposed in porn scenes, which she fought to have removed from foreign sites.
“When you’re Taylor Swift, there’s always going to be recourse,” Goldberg said. “There are a lot more options for people who have resources like she has, where she can get law enforcement from other countries to care. That's not available to most people.”
Sexually explicit Taylor Swift AI imagesCirculate online, prompt backlash
More laws governing deepfake pornography are anticipated in the coming years at the state level.
A possible federal NO FRAUD AI Act was circulated in 2023 in draft form but many in the technological world believe it is too broad and unspecific to be workable.
Future legislation at a federal and state level would require the consensus of lawmakers and more celebrities using their voices to draw attention to the issue, Goldberg said.
“As a society, just like we did with nonconsensual pornography, to just turn the tables on what we'll tolerate, and make it so that people who might share or like or relink or post to this kind of content are deterred from doing that,” Goldberg said.
Contact Kayla Jimenez at [email protected]. Follow her on X, formerly Twitter, at @kaylajjimenez. Elizabeth Weise at [email protected]
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