this post was submitted on 19 May 2025
6 points (80.0% liked)

Ars Technica - All Content

224 readers
1 users here now

All Ars Technica stories

founded 11 months ago
MODERATORS
 

After dragging its feet for years, America is finally taking its first big step toward shielding victims of non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII)—also known as revenge porn—from constantly being retraumatized online.

On Monday afternoon, Donald Trump is scheduled to sign the Take It Down Act into law. That means that within one year, every online platform will be required to remove both actual NCII and fake nudes generated by artificial intelligence within 48 hours of victims' reports or face steep penalties.

Supporters have touted the 48-hour timeline as remarkably fast, empowering victims to promptly stop revenge porn from spreading widely online. The law's passing comes at a time when AI-generated revenge porn is increasingly harming a wider pool of victims—including some who may have never shared a compromising photo, like dozens of kids in middle and high schools nationwide. Acknowledging the substantial harm to kids already, the law includes steeper penalties for NCII targeting minor victims, a threat lawmakers hope will help minors get harmful images removed "as soon as possible."

Read full article

Comments


From Ars Technica - All content via this RSS feed

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 month ago (2 children)

As much as stopping revenge porn is 100% a good thing, this headline is sugar coating the actual purpose of this bill, which is to allow trump to silence critics and erode the first amendment.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

I was about to make the "a broken clock is right twice a day" comment until I read yours. Sigh.....

load more comments (1 replies)