Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Taylor Swift deepfakes

Mary — Taylor Swift made headlines over the weekend for a new reason. Dozens of AI-generated nude images of the pop star went viral. Swift is one of many victims of a disturbing trend of image-based sexual abuse. Petition starter Uldouz Wallace is another. She is a victim of the 2014 iCloud hack, and explicit images that were taken by her ex without consent ended up online. 

Because of her experience, Uldouz is fighting to pass The Protect Act. The law would close the loophole that currently allows for pornography to be created, uploaded, and distributed online without the consent of persons depicted in the material. The bill would also require websites to quickly remove illegal content, and prevent re-upload of it. 

Uldouz is fighting for herself, celebs like Taylor Swift, and everyday people from becoming victims of image-based sexual abuse. Add your signature to help her make The Protect Act law! 

Urge Congress to Pass The Protect Act, to protect victims of Image-Based Sexual Abuse

47,782 have signed Uldouz Wallace's petition. Let's get to 50,000!

Sign now with a click

My name is Uldouz Wallace and I was one of the victims of the iCloud hack and leak in 2014, along with 99 other women in the public eye. 

My ex boyfriend took a few pictures and a video of me without my consent and when I broke up with him, he threatened to leak these images and the video. I called his bluff and ignored it and although he didn't leak it, I was being stalked along with these 99 other women over a two-year span by a hacker. The hacker later auctioned these pictures and videos off on the dark web and it later was leaked. 

When I first found out about the leak my heart dropped and I ended up isolating myself for years. I lost everything — friends, family, relationships, work, opportunities, money, followers, reputation — the list goes on and on. What looked like a promising future and career turned into trauma and abuse overnight. 

What I went through was unbearable, but I was one of the lucky ones that survived. Unfortunately many commit suicide over image based sexual abuse (IBSA), and it made me realize that there's no laws against this on the Internet. I decided that I want to change the law and set better laws to protect future generations. The laws need to be updated to match new technology. I recently testified at Capitol Hill and helped create The Protect Act. This bill will protect everyone. It only takes an instant for anyone to become a victim of image-based sexual abuse.

If you're hearing about this for the first time, image-based sexual abuse (IBSA) is the creating, threatening to share, sharing, or using of recordings (still images or videos) of sexually explicit or sexualized materials without the consent of the person depicted and/or for purposes of exploitation. It can happen with images and videos through hidden camera, deepfake and editing, AI, hacking and leaking, child sexual abuse material also known as CSAM, rape, sex trafficking, catfishing and romance scams, sextortion and prostitution. 

These images can circulate fast and be posted to pornography websites, social media sites, search engine sites or shared without consent to other platforms, often before the victim even realizes it has happened.  

The cruel irony is that there are currently no federal laws requiring websites which allow pornography on their platforms to verify the age and consent of every person depicted in those images or videos. This is a massive gap in the law, and one that must be and can be immediately rectified. These platforms currently have the technology that is required to erase and prevent re-upload of non consensual content but simply don't want to implement it. 

The PROTECT ACT fills the hole in existing law that allows pornography to be created, uploaded, and distributed online without the consent of persons depicted in the material. This has led to the victimization of countless children, women and men who have few or no remedies under present law. 

Notably, the bill has robust requirements for websites to quickly remove content, and prevent re-upload of content, once they are notified the content was created or distributed without consent. Importantly, the bill adds criminal penalties for those who knowingly upload sexually explicit content without the consent of those depicted. This sends the message loud and clear that such activity is wrong, harmful, and will not be tolerated. This bill empowers IBSA victims to hold both the uploaders – and the platforms that profit from their abuse – accountable through civil remedies. 

The PROTECT ACT is currently supported by many organizations & politicians.

You can take direct action now to help this bill become a law. Please take a moment to share this petition with your friends, family, and network.

If you are a survivor of IBSA, join us in signing the survivor letter by clicking here.

For free take down services, therapy, law enforcement, lawyers, current laws in the US and internationally, educational information and many other resources for the US and internationally go to Foundation Ra and support our efforts to further help, prevent and protect victims of Image Based Sexual Abuse, please donate to Registered 501(c)3

Foundation Ra: www.foundationra.com

Want to join the movement? You can volunteer through Foundation Ra  and follow @foundationra on all social media platforms we have plenty of updates, news and educational information and make sure you share, like, comment and use #protectmyimage

Foundation Ra:

www.instagram.com/foundationra

www.facebook.com/foundationra

www.youtube.com/foundationra

www.x.com/foundationra1

www.tiktok.com/@foundationra

Follow me on my social media @uldouz for more updates:
http://www.Instagram.com/uldouz

 

 

 

 

 

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