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Nude Deepfakes: What is EU Doing to Prevent Women from Cyber Harassment


The disturbring rise of sexual deepfakes

Deepfakes are a worry in digital development in this age of rapid technical advancement. This article delves deeply into the workings of deepfake technology, exposing both its potential dangers and its constantly changing capabilities.

The manipulation of images and videos to make sexually oriented content may be considered a criminal offense across all the European Union nations. 

The first directive on violence against will move through its final approval stage by April 2024. 

With the help of AI programs, these images are being modified to undress women without their consent. 

What changes will the new directive bring? And what will happen if the women who live in the European Union are the target of manipulation but the attacks happen in countries outside the European Nation?

The victims: Women

If you are wondering how easy it is to create sexual deepfakes, some websites are just a click away and provide free-of-cost services.

According to the 2023 State of Deepfakes research, it takes around 25 minutes to create a sexual deepfake, and it's free. You just need a photo and the face has to be visible. 

A sample of 95000 deepfake videos were analyzed between 2019 and 2023, and the research discloses that there has been a disturbing 550% increase. 

AI and Deepfakes expert Henry Aider says the people who use these stripping tools want to humiliate, defame, traumatize, and in some incidents, sexual pleasure. 

“And it's important to state that these synthetic stripping tools do not work on men. They are explicitly designed to target women. So it's a good example of a technology that is explicitly malicious. There's nothing neutral about that,” says Henry.

The makers of nude deepfakes search for their target's pictures "anywhere and everywhere" on the web. The pictures can be taken from your Instagram account, Facebook account, or even your WhatsApp display picture. 

Prevention: What to do?

When female victims come across nude deepfakes of themselves, there's a societal need to protect them. 

But the solution lies not in the prevention, but in taking immediate actions to remove them. 

Amanda Manyame, Digital Law and Rights Advisor at Equality Now, says “I'm seeing that trend, but it's like a natural trend any time something digital happens, where people say don't put images of you online, but if you want to push the idea further is like, don't go out on the street because you can have an accident.” The expert further says, “unfortunately, cybersecurity can't help you much here because it's all a question of dismantling the dissemination network and removing that content altogether.”

Today, the victims of nude deepfakes seek various laws like the General Data Protection Regulation, the European Union's Privacy Law, and national defamation laws to seek justice and prevention. 

To the victims who suffer such an offense, it is advisable to take screenshots or video recordings of the deepfake content and use them as proof while reporting it to the police and social media platforms where the incident has happened. 

“There is also a platform called StopNCII, or Stop Non-Consensual Abuse of Private Images, where you can report an image of yourself and then the website creates what is called a 'hash' of the content. And then, AI is then used to automatically have the content taken down across multiple platforms," says the Digital Law and Rights at Equality Now.

Global Impact

The new directive aims to combat sexual violence against women, all 27 member states will follow the same set of laws to criminalize all forms of cyber-violence like sexually motivated "deepfakes."

Amanda Manyame says “The problem is that you might have a victim who is in Brussels. You've got the perpetrator who is in California, in the US, and you've got the server, which is holding the content in maybe, let's say, Ireland. So, it becomes a global problem because you are dealing with different countries.”

Addressing this concern, the MEP and co-author of the latest directive explain that “what needs to be done in parallel with the directive" is to increase cooperation with other countries, "because that's the only way we can also combat crime that does not see any boundaries."

"Unfortunately, AI technology is developing very fast, which means that our legislation must also keep up. So we need to revise the directive in this soon. It is an important step for the current state, but we will need to keep up with the development of AI,” Evin Incir further admits.

Cyber Flashing- Another Horrendous Way of Sexual Assault Via The Internet!


Of all the horrible things a pervert could do using the cyber means, Cyber Flashing is by far the most debauching and harassing of all.

For all those who aren’t well aware of this concept, cyber flashing is like every other form, a highly disgusting method of “image-based sexual abuse”.

This technology backed crime doesn’t stand on a particular pedestal as to the legality of it hence, the fact that people don’t know much about it let alone it being a crime.

You may be sitting somewhere in peace and quiet, supposedly on a much-wanted vacation cruising your lazy fingers on your phone and Bam! A stranger’s genitals cover your phone screen via an AirDrop file.

The initial shock, getting grossed out and the eventual sickening feeling you get is all well understood. Because the moment you try to close the file it only gets sent, again and again, a good number of times.

The nastiest part about this is that the person who sent it to you could be sitting close by, watching you see their nether regions and could be taking some sort of nauseating pleasure out of it.

According to several polls and researches, in England, Scotland and Wales combined, 40 percent of the women have, in one form or the other experienced cyber-flashing by having received repulsively uncalled for pictures of male private parts.


Disappointingly enough, notwithstanding the pervasiveness of the situation not many governments have special legal provisions to contend with cyber-flashing. Several countries’ existing laws don’t cover the subject wholly and only in the light of “sexual harassment or communication”.

Nevertheless, Scotland, Singapore and the American state of Texas did get something done for this but only under the pressure of women’s rights campaigns.

In the years that have passed, groups have suggested pretty fervently the need for the introduction of a new law that solely focuses on “image-based sexual abuse” and legally forbids cyber-flashing.
But it never had a toll on the government and the recommendations got rejected.

Contemplating over the severity of the not-at-all trivial crime and the neglect it has undergone in terms of its legal consequences is desperately needed to frighten away any potential partakers.

The degenerates require getting this into their head that sending someone an unsolicited picture of their genitals is simply not okay and that they can be legally punished for it.

Cyber-flashing could seriously distress the receivers and make them think that they are not safe even in public spaces. It also empowers men to accept the anonymous nature of the ill-act and just show off their genitals, without the fear of getting immediately caught.
Women need to be emboldened about fighting back against it.

Moreover, girls and women need to know that these “dick-pics” are definitely not imprudent tries at flirting and the men need to understand that this is not a pathway of getting nudes in return or appallingly enough, some twisted way of showing off.

The current laws need to keep up with the expeditious changes in technology. Also, how people embrace the ill-usages of it especially for harassment and sexual abuse.