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posted by janrinok on Thursday February 08 2018, @02:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the porn-with-morals dept.

The AI porn purge continues:

Pornhub will be deleting "deepfakes" — AI-generated videos that realistically edit new faces onto pornographic actors — under its rules against nonconsensual porn, following in the footsteps of platforms like Discord and Gfycat. "We do not tolerate any nonconsensual content on the site and we remove all said content as soon as we are made aware of it," the company told Motherboard, which first reported on the deepfakes porn phenomenon last year. Pornhub says that nonconsensual content includes "revenge porn, deepfakes, or anything published without a person's consent or permission."

Update: The infamous subreddit itself, /r/deepfakes, has been banned by Reddit. /r/CelebFakes and /r/CelebrityFakes have also been banned for their non-AI porn fakery (they had existed for over 7 years). Other subreddits like /r/fakeapp (technical support for the software) and /r/SFWdeepfakes remain intact. Reported at Motherboard, The Verge, and TechCrunch.

Motherboard also reported on some users (primarily on a new subreddit, /r/deepfakeservice) offering to accept commissions to create deepfakes porn. This is seen as more likely to result in a lawsuit:

Bringing commercial use into the deepfakes practice opens the creator up to a lawsuit on the basis of right of publicity laws, which describe the right of an individual to control the commercial use of their name, likeness, or any other unequivocal aspect of their identity, legal experts told me.

"The videos are probably wrongful under the law whether or not money is exchanged," Charles Duan, associate director of tech and innovation policy at the advocacy group R Street Institute think tank, told me. "But what's important is that the commercial exchange creates a focal point for tracing and hopefully stopping this activity. It might be easy to be anonymous on the internet, but it's a lot harder when you want to be paid."

[...] David Greene, Civil Liberties Director at the Electronic Freedom Foundation, told me on the phone that buying and selling, like everything with deepfakes, may be clearly unsavory behavior, but not necessarily illegal. "I want to separate something that's probably a dumb legal idea from something that's just a socially bad thing to do," Greene said. "If you're doing it to harass somebody, it's certainly a bad idea legally and socially."

Update: However, /r/deepfakeservice has also been hit with the banhammer. Looks like "deepfakes" will soon become "darkwebfakes".

Previously: AI-Generated Fake Celebrity Porn Craze "Blowing Up" on Reddit
Discord Takes Down "Deepfakes" Channel, Citing Policy Against "Revenge Porn"

Related: Linux Use on Pornhub Surged 14% in 2016
Pornhub's Newest Videos Can Reach Out and Touch You
Pornhub Adopts Machine Learning to Tag Videos as Malvertising Looms
Pornhub's First Store has a Livestreaming Bed Camera, of Course


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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Thursday February 08 2018, @02:09AM (1 child)

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Thursday February 08 2018, @02:09AM (#634631) Journal

    People are blaming this guy [reddit.com] for the subreddit(s) getting taken down. Of course, Reddit was facing some significant (?) bad press over AI celeb porn and would have likely used the banhammer eventually.

    Not only does it seem you internally sabotaged a subreddit for what was as far as I can tell an issue hugely blown out of proportion and easily solvable internally, you're now giving the tech behind DeepFakes a bad rep to uninformed people.

    I'm certainly not claiming that it wasn't already viewed in a negative light by a good chunk of people (after all it was introduced and mostly used for fake celeb porn), but tacking on supposed child porn which caused a site ban certainly isn't going to help change that. You're now suggesting that two subs (r/fakeapp and r/facesets) also get banned despite being completely SFW.

    Compare to:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controversial_Reddit_communities [wikipedia.org]

    In August 2014, Reddit users began sharing a large number of naked pictures of celebrities stolen, using phishing, from their private Apple iCloud accounts. A subreddit, /r/TheFappening, was created as a hub to share and discuss these stolen photos; the situation was called CelebGate by the media. The subreddit contained most of the images. Victims of "The Fappening" included high-profile names such as Jennifer Lawrence and Kate Upton. Some of the images may have constituted child pornography, as the photos of Liz Lee and McKayla Maroney from the leak were claimed to have been taken when the women were underage, though this remains controversial. The subreddit was closed by Reddit administrators in September 2014. The scandal led to wider criticisms concerning the website's moderation from The Verge and The Daily Dot.

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  • (Score: 4, Funny) by maxwell demon on Thursday February 08 2018, @07:10AM

    by maxwell demon (1608) on Thursday February 08 2018, @07:10AM (#634760) Journal

    In August 2014, Reddit users began sharing a large number of naked pictures

    Ah, how could they share the pictures without putting a frame around them! :-)

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