Defines "computer generated image" as those created or modified using AI or software. Criminalizes distributing non-consensual intimate images, including AI-generated ones, with enhanced penalties for repeat offenders. Establishes new offenses for voyeurism involving AI or digital tools.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding state legislative act that amends the Indiana Code to criminalize specific conduct related to AI-generated intimate images and voyeurism, with explicit criminal penalties including misdemeanors and felonies.
The document primarily addresses risks related to malicious actors (4.3 Fraud, scams, and targeted manipulation) through criminalization of non-consensual intimate image distribution and AI-generated deepfakes. It also addresses privacy and security concerns (2.1 Privacy compromise) related to voyeurism and unauthorized image capture. Coverage is concentrated in the malicious actors and privacy/security domains.
This legislation does not govern AI use within specific economic sectors. Rather, it establishes criminal prohibitions that apply to individuals across all sectors who engage in voyeurism or distribute non-consensual intimate images, including AI-generated ones. The law is sector-agnostic criminal legislation.
The document does not address AI development lifecycle stages. It focuses on criminalizing the misuse of AI-generated content (intimate images) after deployment, but does not govern the planning, development, training, validation, or deployment processes of AI systems themselves.
The document mentions AI and computer software programs in the context of creating or modifying intimate images, but does not define or regulate AI models, AI systems, or any specific categories of AI. It focuses on the output (computer generated images) rather than the underlying AI technology.
Indiana General Assembly
The document is a legislative act enacted by the Indiana General Assembly, which is the state legislative body with authority to create and amend state criminal law.
While no specific enforcement agency is named, the document establishes criminal offenses that would be enforced through Indiana's criminal justice system, including prosecutors, courts, and law enforcement agencies with jurisdiction over criminal matters.
The document does not establish any specific monitoring body or oversight mechanism. As criminal legislation, monitoring would occur through standard criminal justice processes (law enforcement investigations, prosecutions) rather than a dedicated monitoring entity.
The legislation targets individuals who engage in voyeurism or distribute non-consensual intimate images, including AI-generated ones. These are natural persons who may commit the specified criminal offenses, not organizations or AI developers specifically.
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