Yeah this is horrific. I have gotten into multiple arguments with people on this site who think this is totally fine, and not at all creepy. It’s a violation of privacy and (often, but distressingly not always) a violation of the law.
I think the issue is more basic than that, meaning that we should be able to create private online spaces and not share our photos and also not have a culture of sharing photos in such a way.
Deepfakes, AI and any other technology is going to happen and our way to control it is not to try and avoid technological advances but understand that our culture needs to be built upon the realization that such technology exists.
Don’t get me wrong, this is horrible for so many reasons but this is a losing battle if you just try to prosecute people who do it without also tackling the core issue.
I certainly wasn’t suggesting that we only tackle this legally. In fact, I was lamenting that even here, on Lemmy, the exact problematic social dynamics you point out persist
This is horrific, and as someone who has played around with these tools I’m amazed at the wonderful things they can do (I very easily touched up my work photo to give myself better clothes), but I also recognize how easily they can be abused.
We really need a change in our society where we stop with the over-sharing. Sadly, most of the time it’s the parents posting images to social networks without caring who has access to view them.
Definitely creepy and definitely a violation of privacy (especially when they get shared and even if not, singe most of these tools are cloud-hosted).
My only caveat is that teen culture regarding such things changes all the time. Boomers tried to ban my generation from sexting, because it could be abused. Didnt work obviously.
Yeah this is horrific. I have gotten into multiple arguments with people on this site who think this is totally fine, and not at all creepy. It’s a violation of privacy and (often, but distressingly not always) a violation of the law.
I think the issue is more basic than that, meaning that we should be able to create private online spaces and not share our photos and also not have a culture of sharing photos in such a way.
Deepfakes, AI and any other technology is going to happen and our way to control it is not to try and avoid technological advances but understand that our culture needs to be built upon the realization that such technology exists.
Don’t get me wrong, this is horrible for so many reasons but this is a losing battle if you just try to prosecute people who do it without also tackling the core issue.
I certainly wasn’t suggesting that we only tackle this legally. In fact, I was lamenting that even here, on Lemmy, the exact problematic social dynamics you point out persist
I do hope that the solution to this is not an iconoclastic removal of all photos from the internet
This is horrific, and as someone who has played around with these tools I’m amazed at the wonderful things they can do (I very easily touched up my work photo to give myself better clothes), but I also recognize how easily they can be abused.
We really need a change in our society where we stop with the over-sharing. Sadly, most of the time it’s the parents posting images to social networks without caring who has access to view them.
This is ineffective when the people generating fake nudes are classmates of the victim.
What we can do:
Even if the parents are reasonable there are plenty of grandparents, aunts, uncles or friends parents that don’t care.
Definitely creepy and definitely a violation of privacy (especially when they get shared and even if not, singe most of these tools are cloud-hosted).
My only caveat is that teen culture regarding such things changes all the time. Boomers tried to ban my generation from sexting, because it could be abused. Didnt work obviously.