Help against appearance and voice theft

From Stop Synthetic Filth! wiki
Revision as of 17:18, 5 January 2022 by Juho Kunsola (talk | contribs) (+ {{#lst:Against synthetic human-like fakes|cybercivilrights.org}} + {{#lst:Against synthetic human-like fakes|badassarmy.org}})
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Help in case of appearance theft

Global

Information on removing involuntary fake pornography from Google at support.google.com if it shows up in Google. Form for removing involuntary fake pornography at support.google.com, select "I want to remove: A fake nude or sexually explicit picture or video of myself". Google added “involuntary synthetic pornographic imagery” to its ban list in September 2018, allowing anyone to request the search engine block results that falsely depict them as “nude or in a sexually explicit situation.”[1]


Report it!

Artificial Intelligence Algorithmic Automation Incidents Controversies at aiaaic.org[contact 1][contacted 1] was founded by Charlie Pownall. The AIAAIC repository at aiaaic.org contains tons of reporting on different problematic uses of AI.

USA

Laws against synthetic filth have been put in place at least in USA

Helpful organizations in the USA


China

Recent losses

FacePinPoint.com was a countermeasure to non-consensual pornography in 2017-2021, invented by Lionel Hagege in 2015, that would protect humanity against the destructive effects of malicious synthetic pornography, if it were revived and purveyed as a public good.

Recent advances


On 3rd of October 2019 California outlawed with the AB-602 the use of w:human image synthesis technologies to make fake pornography without the consent of the people depicted in. The law was authored by Assembly member w:Marc Berman.[2] The law came into effect 2020-01-01.

See also

References

  1. Harwell, Drew (2018-12-30). "Fake-porn videos are being weaponized to harass and humiliate women: 'Everybody is a potential target'". w:The Washington Post. Retrieved 2021-01-31. In September [of 2018], Google added “involuntary synthetic pornographic imagery” to its ban list
  2. Mihalcik, Carrie (2019-10-04). "California laws seek to crack down on deepfakes in politics and porn". w:cnet.com. w:CNET. Retrieved 2021-01-31.


Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "contact", but no corresponding <references group="contact"/> tag was found
Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "contacted", but no corresponding <references group="contacted"/> tag was found