An 18-year-old male used AI-powered apps to create fake nude images of over a dozen girls and women from photos posted on social media, and his 17-year-old ex-girlfriend was arrested for distributing these images to 17 high school students after finding them on his phone.
An 18-year-old Washington High School student used AI-powered 'undressing' apps to create fake nude images of at least 14 females by downloading photos they had posted on social media and digitally removing their clothing. The images were discovered when his ex-girlfriend, 17-year-old Jaylyn Lee, found them on his phone and subsequently distributed them to 17 high school students over a month-long period. The victims included minors, with some photos taken when they were as young as 16. Lee was arrested and charged with promoting an altered sexual depiction of an identifiable person without consent, a third-degree felony. However, the male who created the images has not been charged, as Florida's 2022 deepfake law requires that images be 'promoted' or shared for criminal charges to apply. Police report investigating over 175 photos total, with victims and parents expressing concern about the realistic appearance of the altered images and their potential long-term impact on the victims' reputations and mental health.
Domain classification, causal taxonomy, severity scores, and national security assessments were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
Using AI systems to gain a personal advantage over others such as through cheating, fraud, scams, blackmail or targeted manipulation of beliefs or behavior. Examples include AI-facilitated plagiarism for research or education, impersonating a trusted or fake individual for illegitimate financial benefit, or creating humiliating or sexual imagery.
Human
Due to a decision or action made by humans
Intentional
Due to an expected outcome from pursuing a goal
Post-deployment
Occurring after the AI model has been trained and deployed