Mostly Human with Laurie Segall

On with Kara Swisher: Deepfake abuse panel, featuring Laurie Segall

55 min
Jul 16, 20262 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Kara Swisher hosts a panel discussion on non-consensual deepfake pornography, featuring attorney Carrie Goldberg, journalist Laurie Segall, and computer scientist V.S. Subramanian. The episode explores the scope of deepfake abuse affecting teens and adults, the technology behind it, legal frameworks like the Take It Down Act, and efforts to hold platforms accountable for enabling this harm.

Insights
  • Deepfake abuse has evolved from targeting celebrities to affecting middle schoolers and everyday people, with one survey showing 1 in 8 teens personally knows a victim
  • Platform design choices—particularly Elon Musk's integration of Grok into X—dramatically accelerated deepfake creation and distribution by making tools accessible to mainstream users
  • Product liability law may be more effective than Section 230 protections in holding platforms accountable, since platforms are creating the content themselves rather than just hosting user-generated content
  • Technical workarounds (e.g., stable diffusion, API-based generation, distributed processing) make detection and enforcement extremely difficult even with perfect detection mechanisms
  • Friction from multiple sources—legal changes, platform deranking, exposure, law enforcement attention—was more effective in taking down Mr. Deepfakes than any single intervention
Trends
Deepfake technology quality and ease-of-use improving exponentially, making detection increasingly difficult even for expertsShift from dark web distribution to mainstream social platforms, dramatically expanding audience and accessibilityPeer-to-peer deepfake abuse in schools becoming normalized as a 'prank' among teenagers unaware of legal and psychological consequencesMonetization of deepfake platforms through freemium and premium models, creating financial incentives for creators and platformsRegulatory fragmentation with state-level laws varying in scope, forcing victims to navigate inconsistent legal frameworksCloud infrastructure providers and payment processors enabling deepfake economies through lack of content monitoringPlatforms claiming Section 230 immunity and First Amendment protections for AI-generated content, a novel legal argumentInternational enforcement gaps allowing operators to relocate or continue operations overseas after domestic pressureEducation gap: schools and parents largely unprepared to address deepfake creation and harassment among studentsVictim-enforcement problem: laws like Take It Down Act lack teeth because victims cannot sue platforms for non-compliance
Companies
X (formerly Twitter)
Platform where Grok chatbot generated and hosted 1.8M deepfake images during 9-day period; subject of lawsuit
XAI
Creator of Grok chatbot integrated into X; defendant in lawsuit filed by Carrie Goldberg on behalf of Ashley St. Clair
Google
Deranked Mr. Deepfakes platform; prohibits sexual content apps in Play Store; mentioned as friction point in takedown
Apple
App Store prohibits overtly sexual content; disabled searches for nudify apps; mentioned as friction point
Reddit
Banned sexually explicit deepfakes, leading Mr. Deepfakes operator to identify X as profitable alternative platform
Spotify
Mentioned in iHeart advertising context regarding podcast listener demographics
Pandora
Mentioned in iHeart advertising context regarding podcast listener demographics
Meta (Facebook/Instagram)
Mentioned as platform with content removal reporting mechanisms under Take It Down Act
People
Kara Swisher
Moderates panel discussion on deepfake abuse; previously reported on Grok deepfakes in January
Carrie Goldberg
Specializes in internet abuse and revenge porn; filed lawsuit against XAI on behalf of Ashley St. Clair
Laurie Segall
Created 'Searching for Mr. Deepfakes' investigative docuseries; tracked down anonymous operator of Mr. Deepfakes
V.S. Subramanian
Led team developing Global Online Deepfake detection system; expert on deepfake technology and detection limitations
Georgia Wells
Provided expert question about Take It Down Act enforcement impact on teen harassment landscape
Joanne Chu
Victim featured in Segall's investigation; discovered deepfakes of herself on Mr. Deepfakes platform
Ashley St. Clair
Plaintiff in lawsuit against XAI; targeted by Grok-generated deepfakes; subject of hostile Elon Musk posts
Elon Musk
Integrated Grok into X platform; made deepfake creation accessible to mainstream users; subject of criticism
Hani Farid
Previously appeared on podcast in January; expressed concerns about agentic AI supercharging deepfake creation
David Doe
Pharmacist hospital worker; anonymous operator of Mr. Deepfakes for 6 years; identified and exposed by Segall
Quotes
"Nearly all deep fake porn depicts women. Despite laws and moderation efforts, pornographic deep fake websites and so-called nudify apps continue to multiply."
Kara SwisherOpening remarks
"It's very much akin to physical assault. I have like less than 3,000 followers, but it doesn't matter if you're famous or you're not."
Joanne ChuVictim testimony
"The worst guys are the platforms. And so until we have regulations that put the victims in the driver seats to not just get criminal justice against the individuals but to actually get justice against the platforms, I think the only recourse we have is to use our courts and make these companies pay."
Carrie GoldbergMid-discussion
"Over here in reality, we have children who are ending their lives because of deepfake sextortion and people are sleeping on it."
Laurie SegallClosing remarks
"All models are wrong, some are useful. Whatever models are being used by platforms to find these deep fakes, they're never going to be perfect. And so the question is, are they making the effort?"
V.S. SubramanianTechnical discussion
Full Transcript
This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human. Run a business and not thinking about podcasting? Think again. More Americans listen to podcasts, then add supported streaming music from Spotify and Pandora. And as the number one podcaster, iHeart's twice as large as the next two combined. Learn how podcasting can help your business. Call 844-844-IHEART. What's up, fam? It's sports journalist Ari Chambers. Hey, what's up, y'all? It's your girl, Sam Jay. And we're the hosts of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from Together. We're breaking down the biggest headlines, the viral moments, and the stories everyone's talking about across women's sports. From game-changing performances to culture-shifting conversations, we'll give you our takes, our debates, and a few laughs along the way. Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is Chelsea Handler from Dear Chelsea. Every week, the news gets worse, the world gets crazier, and Yamanika is here to tell whoever's responsible, you're the problem. Do you know I just found out who Sidney Sweeney was? If he got a bunch of women, then I should have a bunch of men. Do better or do less so I don't have to do so much. I'm Yamanika, and I'm out. Listen to You're the Problem with Yamanika on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. on Raiders of the Lost podcast we explore cinema like no one else including huge interviews with stars like Ryan Gosling on Project Hail Mary it was like the Jaws shark didn't always work came with its own problems that's what made it great the cast of Obsession on set there was so much magic happening with each scene we were putting together deep dives into classics like 2001 A Space Odyssey or Fight Club, plus weekly episodes on all industry news. Listen to Raiders of the Lost podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And for more, follow at Raiders of the Lost podcast and at TikTok Podcast Network on TikTok. Hi, Mostly Human listeners. It's Lori Siegel. Today, I have a treat for you. I'm sharing an episode of Kara Swisher's podcast, On with Kara Swisher. In it, Cara hosts a panel of deepfake experts, including me, to discuss the threat, the current scope, and the future of sexually explicit deepfake abuse. Now, if you've been listening to our four-part series, Searching for Mr. Deepfakes, this is a perfect cap. If you're new to the subject, it's a fantastic primer. Hope you enjoy. Hey, folks. A word of warning before we begin. Today's episode discusses sexual violence, including rape, graphic sexual content, and suicide. So you might want to keep this in mind when you decide if and where to listen. Hi, everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. This is On with Kara Swisher, and I'm Kara Swisher. My guests today are attorney Kerry Goldberg, tech journalist and CEO of Mostly Human Media, Lori Siegel, and V.S. Subramanian, the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Computer Science at Northwestern University. We're talking about non-consensual deepfake pornography, or AI-generated explicit videos and images that use real people's likenesses without their consent. Celebrities were often the target of early pornographic deepfakes. Now, according to one survey, one in eight teens personally knows someone who has been targeted. Nearly all deep fake porn depicts women. Despite laws and moderation efforts, pornographic deep fake websites and so-called nudify apps continue to multiply. And a recent analysis from Wired found that Elon Musk's Grock chatbot is still being used to generate and host non-consensual deep fakes. I am not surprised in the least. Carrie Goldberg is a victim's rights attorney. Her law firm specializes in fighting internet abuse and revenge porn. Journalist Lori Siegel recently released Searching for Mr. Deepfakes, an investigative docuseries created for TikTok in partnership with Paris Hilton. It follows an investigation to unmask the anonymous operator behind one of the internet's most notorious deepfake porn platforms. V.S. Subramanian is a top computer scientist and deepfake expert. He led the team that developed the Global Online Deepfake detection system, a free platform to help journalists detect deep fakes. I think it's critically important to talk about this issue. When I started my career, pornography was at the heart of the problems with the early internet and the uses of it and the abuse of it was built into the system at the start. A lot of people were aware of it then and have had a very hard time dealing with it, even as technology has gotten better and better at being more and more abusive. So it's critical that we keep talking about it. We criminalize this and we start to hold platforms, big platforms, responsible for the stuff that they distribute. Our expert question today comes from Wall Street Journal tech reporter Georgia Wells. This is an important conversation and one we will keep having. So stick around. And one more thing before we get started. If you're going to be in Washington, D.C. on July 16th, please join us live at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center for a taping of On. I'll be talking to Gina Raimondo, Commerce Secretary under President Biden and former Rhode Island governor, about what AI means for the American workforce. And as a special bonus, before that conversation, I'll be speaking with Johns Hopkins University President Ron Daniels and the University of Notre Dame President Father Robert Dowd about how universities are approaching AI and workforce issues. You can get tickets and learn more at voxmedia.com slash Kara Swisher live. Thank you. 844-IHEART to get started. That's 844-844-IHEART. This is Chelsea Handler from Dear Chelsea. Every week, the news gets worse, the world gets crazier, and Yamanika is here to tell whoever's responsible, you're the problem. If you come over here to play games, I'ma check you, okay? If you do some in the news that don't sound good, I'ma play you. Join Yamanika Saunders as she breaks down the week's most problematic stories on our new podcast, You're the Problem with Yamanika. Do you know I just found out who Sydney Sweeney was? New episodes weekly every Wednesday as part of my new network, the Dear Chelsea Network. If he got a bunch of women, then I should have a bunch of men. Do better or do less so I don't have to do so much. So join Yamanika each episode as she answers one question. Who's the problem? I'm Yamanika and I'm out. Listen to You're the Problem with Yamanika on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. solo rower to go from California to Hawaii. My first thought is like, what's up with the snacks? Like, what are we eating? The highlights, the rivalries, the breakout stars, the moments that take over your entire timeline. And the conversations that start during the game and somehow keep going all week. Every week, we're breaking down the biggest stories across women's sports. Naomi Osaka showing out. She beat Sabalenka. Shout out to you, Naomi. You get the palm, Naomi. You get the palm for that. Because we're not just interested in what happened, we're interested in why everyone's talking about it. Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jake Brennan, and on the Disgraceland podcast, I explore the wild lives of rock stars and unbelievable true crime stories from music history. These are the stories you haven't heard, the kind you'll end up telling someone else. Like the time Paul McCartney spent in one of the world's most notorious prisons. Imagine that. You're Paul McCartney. It's 1980. You're an ex-Beatle. And you're doing time in one of Japan's worst prisons, right there alongside Yakuza gangsters, and for a ridiculous charge. Or the bizarre crime Lady Gaga is accused of. Who is the artist Lady Gaga is being accused of doing the unthinkable to after allegedly stealing her music and style to become famous. And what about that time Blondie's Debbie Harry escaped a serial killer? The man who had given her that ride she barely escaped from was Ted Bundy. Listen to Disgraceland on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Carrie, Lori, and V.S., thanks for coming on On. Good to be here. Thrilled to be here. Hello, hello. So I talked to experts back in January about the proliferation of sexualized, non-consensual AI deepfakes, including images of children on Elon Musk's X that were generated by its Grok chatbot. Obviously, AI-created deepfake porn hasn't gone away on Grok or elsewhere, and the technology continues to improve. But I'd like each of you to explain the current scope of the problem and how pervasive it is and who it's affecting and how technically advanced it is. We're going to get more into detail. So go high level here. Keri, we'll start with you, then Lori, then VS. So I'm a plaintiff's attorney that sues tech companies. And generally, I see problems at the very early stages. So, you know, back probably seven years ago, we started getting situations where celebrities and really high-level content creators were being deepfaked. And then over the last just, I'd say, year or so, it started trickling down to middle schoolers getting deepfaked. But all the apps involved were these pretty obscure things. But then everything totally changed when Elon started sending around, you know, pictures of toasters in bikinis. And it just unleashed this never-before-seen sort of situation where everyone was able to create deepfakes and then immediately publish them on the X platform. So that's where you saw it. Lori? Yeah, when we started looking at this years ago, it was very much focused on celebrities, oftentimes women in power, politicians. It seemed like the first line of defense. And I remember thinking at the time, oh no, you might not care about these people. We should care about these people. But what this means is this is gonna happen in our high schools. And unfortunately, that's what we're seeing happening. So I would just say it's rampant and it's happening in our communities. It's happening to women, to all sorts of folks. And unfortunately, it's something that teenagers are learning and it's becoming commonplace. Go ahead, V.S. Kara, I'm a technologist, and so I've spent a lot more time thinking about the technology. Over the last, you know, five, six years ago, the ability to create deep fakes was in its infancy. But over the last five years, and in particular over the last year or two, it's really gotten to a stage where even experts like me on the detection of deep fakes have difficulty eyeballing something, listening to something. and telling if it's real or fake. So what we're seeing is something where you really need humans and AI to come together to work as some kind of partnership to try and figure this out. And, you know, until we can get that right, I don't see an end in sight. And how has the technology improved in the last year? Just ease of use? Ease of use has always been there. The improvement has been in the quality of the generator deepfakes. So today, for example, we're seeing things like face swapping. So I could record something of myself saying something thoroughly objectionable and then put, you know, replace my face with that of a celebrity. In the past, that was difficult to do. There were things around the edges of the face that would be noticeable. Today, much of that has been worked out. An ease of use for normal people to do so, correct? Indeed. Absolutely. Yeah. So Mr. Deepfakes launched in 2018 and was once again the largest deepfake porn site online, getting 17 million visits a month at its peak. Lori, talk about your investigation into Mr. Deepfakes and how it began. It began a bit with an obsession, to be quite honest with you. I remember it was 2022, ChatGPT had launched. Everybody was talking about how AI was going to just do these incredible things. It's going to cure cancer. It's going to, you know, give us all this free time. And of course, I mean, Kara, you know this better than anyone. We're all kind of looking at this and saying, OK, there are a lot of unintended consequences, and this is moving very quickly without the correct guardrails. And someone told me about Mr. Deepfakes. I will never forget going to this site and opening it up and seeing thousands, thousands of highly sexually graphic images, deepfakes of women who did not consent. And they were violent in nature. it was a website where a creator could say, you know, could go and make money. And someone could go and say, I want this woman doing this, and they could pay for it. So it was beyond just a website. It was a platform. And then what was even more concerning as we were digging into it was, you know, there was everything from training data of women's faces to create hyper-realistic deep fake pornography. And then there were forums where people would exchange notes on, here's the latest deepfake tools. Here's how you can do this. You can pay a premium and get a deepfake training manual. And so my initial thought was this isn't going to just be for these high-profile women. And high-profile, I would say, let's take it with a grain of salt. And I remember thinking at the time, well, it's not going to stop here. You know, this is just the beginning of it. And by the way, you're looking at these forums and you're seeing people say, is it wrong that I want to do this to my sister-in-law? And, oh, this is so easy to do. And so it's almost creating entertainment around deepfake abuse. And so as I was looking at this, I thought, well, surely there's something these women can do to help themselves. And the reality was absolutely not. There was nothing they could do because the man behind it was anonymous and he'd been anonymous for six years. And even so, even if he wasn't anonymous, the laws hadn't caught up. And even when I went out and started talking about this, and by the way, you never want to be the person talking about deepfake porn at the dinner table, but turns out I was. People were like, well, the images aren't real, that so it doesn't matter. And I'm sure everybody on here is kind of just shaking their head. So we also had a cultural problem. We needed people to realize that these are so hyper-realistic. Actually, this causes deep, deep psychological abuse and it can be used to try to digitally abuse a woman. I say a woman, anyone. And so that was what was alarming. And so we decided we had to go find him and raise awareness. So that was the beginning of the investigation. Let's hear from Joanne Chu. She's an artist and actor, one of the women featured in Lori's investigation. She's talking about the moment when she realized her image had been used in porn on Mr. Deepfakes. I was just bored one evening, and I'm just going to Google my name and see what comes up. I kept scrolling down, and then I said, what, what, what, what, what is this? It's like my face on very disturbing and graphic, graphic content. It's, you know, Joanne Chu, or Joanne Chu. In the beginning, it was just a few listings. Mr. Deepfakes came up, social media girls, e-porner. And then when I typed it in again, it multiplied. It's very much akin to physical assault. I have like less than 3,000 followers, but it doesn't matter if you're famous or you're not. Just looking at Mr. Deepfakes, it's like they have a whole alphabetized database. At one point, when I typed in my name, my stuff wasn't coming up first anymore. It was all of this content. So she compares it to being physically assaulted. Carrie, does this reflect what you've heard from your clients? Because it sounds like perpetrators are telling themselves that it isn't real harm. Yeah, I remember this when I first started my firm back in 2014. And it was everyone's attitude about revenge porn and how, you know, this is just an online problem. And back then there were all these revenge porn websites and people were searchable through Google which would lead people to the search engine results And it would just be pages and pages of nude images Like all the harm was really really underestimated back then And it took a huge amount of advocacy to change the public opinion about the shame around being, you know, nude online. And we're just we're seeing something really, really similar. The difference, though, is that back, you know, 10 years ago, women were being blamed for having shared an intimate image in the first place. And with deep fakes, I don't see that same kind of victim blaming because here no one consented to the image in the first place. But there is still a lot of, I think, marginalization and minimizing of the harm. That it's not physical assault, that it's... Yeah, I feel it is conceptually different than a physical assault. But that doesn't mean that it's not still really, really harmful and humiliating for victims. Especially like I see so many young people who are like victims and it's other young people's doing it to them, you know, like where it's peer on peer in junior high school and high school settings. And a lot of times the offenders just think that they're doing a prank or if, you know, and always the defense is, well, I barely shared it with anybody. I didn't post it online. But these things find a way to get published. So deep fake technology first emerged around 2015. V.S., talk about the online communities that exist for sharing information and making so-called nudify tools accessible. And how has it evolved over the past 10 years in terms of how it's used? So, Cara, there are a number of nudification AI tools. So these are tools that are of various varieties. One, as I mentioned earlier, is face swapping, where you've got an individual who's nude performing some sex act. and their face has been replaced with the face of somebody like Miss Chu, who you alluded to a couple of minutes back. So that's one class of techniques. Another is to use massive databases of training data of existing nude individuals to create and generate new nudes of people who are hyper-realistic, who are performing acts which the real individual portrayed never performed. So that's another class of techniques. And I don't want to go into the gory details of how that's done, but there are a number of techniques. These techniques have evolved better and better every single year. And so as a consequence, what we see is really a huge number of websites that can disseminate such stuff, not just the produced content, but also the tools that are used to create and disseminate this stuff. And that's typically done on the dark web through some kind of distribution network on the dark web. And what changed when Elon made it easy to do so? Because for all eyes on the dark web, you have to actually make an attempt to go get it. It's like going to a porn store or going to a porn movie or something back in the old days. Talk a little bit about how that changed. Well, I can't speak specifically to Elon and what he did. But what I can say is that the more these tools are available through normal channels, the more the audience that gets access to them. And as soon as you have a big audience, you have a bigger audience of bad guys. or, as Kerry mentioned, just teenagers who don't know better and haven't been taught better, possibly because their teachers and their parents, however decent they may be, were not aware of the threat. And by the time they figured out, it was too late. Deep fakes and nudify-ups are also a big problem in schools. As we mentioned earlier, a recent survey of roughly 550 U.S. teens found that over half had created at least one image using nudification tools Well, a third of the teens reported having their image created and shared non-consensually. I'm sure the numbers are higher, actually. Sites like Mr. Deepfakes and apps like Grok have, as we noted, have normalized creating non-consensual, in some cases, violent sexual imagery, often of women. Lori, talk about the consequences for young people. Yeah. You know, I'll start. I always like to say, like, to try to make it a little bit personal. I'll never forget. And I'm going to take it here, and I promise I'll get to young folks. But I'll never forget, I think it was 2023 when a group of technologists approached me and said, can we have AI attack you and see what it could find? And because I am a crazy person, I said, sure, let's see. And what they did was they had AI come up with an attack against me. And it took some true things, right? Like I've interviewed Mark Zuckerberg before or I'm a technology journalist. And then it ended up in front of an audience. It ended up creating, they created sexually explicit deepfakes of me. And I'll never forget, because this, I had consented. I didn't realize they were going to do that, but I had consented to this demo. And I'll never forget looking at the audience, look at these sexually explicit deep fakes of me. And I could, as a person who generally forms sentences for a living, I stopped being able to form sentences. I felt shame. I felt humiliation. I felt like the world had seen me naked, to be quite honest with you. And then I thought to myself, well, if that's how I feel and I know what this technology is, imagine what that's going to be like for an 11-year-old girl, you know? And I think that's what we started hearing. So I've spoken to a lot of parents, a lot of teenagers who've had this happen to them. I spoke to one woman who said, and you know, she's in her early 20s. She said she, after this was happening and she went out and she tried to get this stopped and people said, there's nothing you can do. They blamed her. Very similar to what Carrie is talking about back when we were talking about non-consensual pornography. People didn't quite understand it. she told me she walked to the roof of her building and she considered jumping off. And you talk to a politician who describes this as digital rape. And so for me, it was really confusing because I was looking at this website that for me, this website represented this dystopian era where we lose consent in an AI era, where, you know, our most intimate qualities can be weaponized against us. And then externally, we were hearing, but it's not real, it doesn't matter. when it really impacts the way a young person, any person walks through the world. We spoke to a woman named Molly, who was a mother who had this, her husband's best friend deep faked the whole neighborhood, 80 women in the community, and created sexually explicit deep fakes. And she said it impacted how she would go on the bus and look at people and wonder if they'd seen this. And she had to go on a, she said, a porn hunt for her own face on the web. And I think it really impacts, from a human perspective, how you walk through the world and how you hold yourself. And it can have reputational harm. Right. So, Carrie, your law firm and your word sues, quote, psychos, pervs, trolls and toxic tech. In January, your firm filed a lawsuit against XA on behalf of Ashley St. Clair, a conservative influencer who had a child with Elon Musk. She alleges that his company's chatbot was used to create and disseminate sexually explicit non-consensual images of her. Talk about the lawsuit and how is it representative of bigger legal issues around deep fake porn? When Grok suddenly had this new capability of being able to create nudification images, this was the first time in history that a nudifying tool was integrated into a widely used social media platform, which combined the ability to just generate an image with the widespread dissemination. And so suddenly an image could just be viewable by millions and millions of people. But also, I mean, you know, X is for people 13 and up. And so children were also then consumers of the images, which is illegal. And we're also, there were children that were the victims of it. And the images posted were not just people in bikinis, but Grok would pose them in sexual positions. It would respond to prompts telling them to drench their body in blood and semen-like fluids, hold suggestive props, and just really vulgar and explicit images. And it seemed very clear that this was an intended rollout of a product that was known to be harmful. They were like something like 1.8 million posts of women and children being deep faked, which accounted for like 41 percent of all the images posted during this nine day period. So Ashley St. Clair is somebody who is really demonized on the X platform because of some of the hostile things that Elon Musk has said about her was a huge target of the deepfakes. And there were just so many images that Grok generated and published on her own page. And so we sued them. We first got, you know, attempted to get a temporary restraining order to stop Grok from deepfaking her. And then we sued them for defective design and other sort of product liability types of lawsuits, negligence. And the claim that I like the best is that we sued them for public nuisance. There was just no reasonable, safe use of this product but to harass people publicly. So that's where it stands now. Yeah. Well, we had to give XAI statutory notice that we were filing for a temporary restraining order. And they immediately sued Ashley in Texas, claiming that she had breached the XAI terms of service by even threatening to sue them in her home state of New York. So now we are litigating the issue in two different venues. They're also trying to use the X terms of service to get the XAI case transferred to New York. And the judge initially last week said that XAI can rely on the X terms of service to transfer the case. To Texas, you mean, to Texas. Yeah, so even though X is not a defendant in our case, only XAI is, the judge still let them borrow from a different Elon company, which I think is really scary. So is that where it's going? Well, we filed an emergency petition for mandamus to try to get the stay held up. But I don't know. We don't have the outcome on that. We'll be back in a minute. combined. So whatever your customers listen to, they'll hear your message. Plus, only iHeart can extend your message to audiences across broadcast radio. Think podcasting can help your business? Think iHeart. Streaming, radio, and podcasting. Let us show you at iHeartAdvertising.com. That's iHeartAdvertising.com. This is Chelsea Handler from Dear Chelsea. Every week, the news gets worse, the world gets crazier, and Yamanika is here to tell whoever's responsible, you're the problem. If you come over here to play games, I'ma check you. Okay? If you do some shit in the news that don't sound good, I'ma play you. Join Yamanika Saunders as she breaks down the week's most problematic stories on her new podcast, You're the Problem with Yamanika. Do you know I just found out who Sidney Sweeney was? New episodes weekly every Wednesday as part of my new network, the Dear Chelsea Network. If he got a bunch of women, then I should have a bunch of men. Do better or do less so I don't have to do so much. So join Yamanika each episode as she answers one question. Who's the problem? I'm Yamanika and I'm out. Listen to You're the Problem with Yamanika on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What's up, fam? I'm sports journalist Ari Chambers. Hey, what's up, y'all? It's your girl, Sam Jay. And we're the hosts of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from Together and I Heart Women's Sports. Because let's be real, women's sports is giving us way too much to talk about these days. So Kelsey Finler, she became the first female solo rower to go from California to Hawaii. My first thought is just like, what's up with the snacks? Like, what are we eating? The highlights, the rivalries, the breakout stars, the moments that take over your entire timeline. and the conversations that start during the game and somehow keep going all week. Every week, we're breaking down the biggest stories across women's sports. Naomi Osaka showing out. She beat Sabalenka. Shout out to you, Naomi. You get the palm, Naomi. You get the palm for that. Because we're not just interested in what happened, we're interested in why everyone's talking about it. Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jake Brennan, and on the Disgraceland podcast, I explore the wild lives of rock stars and unbelievable true crime stories from music history. These are the stories you haven't heard. The kind you'll end up telling someone else. Like the time Paul McCartney spent in one of the world's most notorious prisons. Imagine that. You're Paul McCartney. It's 1980. You're an ex-Beatle. And you're doing time in one of Japan's worst prisons, right there alongside Yakuza gangsters, and for a ridiculous charge. Or the bizarre crime Lady Gaga is accused of. Who is the artist Lady Gaga is being accused of doing the unthinkable to, after allegedly stealing her music and style to become famous? And what about that time Blondie's Debbie Harry escaped a serial killer? The man who had given her that ride she barely escaped from was Ted Bundy. Listen to Disgraceland on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So let's get to the tech infrastructure that supports the creation and dissemination of deepfakes. Analysis from Media Outlet Indicator found that nudify apps often use infrastructure from tech companies. VS, explain the relationship between deepfake porn sites, tech companies, and the social media platforms, And to what extent do these sites and nudify apps rely on big tech infrastructure? This was an issue when I was interviewing people who were creating all manner of nonsense around the insurrection on January 6th. And companies moved quickly to take some of it down, but they were clearly the way people got to these different sites. That's a broad question, Cara. So let me try and break it down into pieces. The first is, if you're generating deepfakes at scale, so think the kind of thing Laurie was talking about with Mr. Deepfake. He's trying to generate thousands, millions of deepfakes. And so that requires computational hardware, what are called graphical computing units or GPUs, which today are pretty scarce and expensive. And that scarcity and price doesn't look like it's coming down very much anytime in the near future. Those resources are heavily supported by cloud infrastructure providers. Again, I'm not naming any specific companies, but there are a number of companies that offer cloud services. So part of the onus is placed on them if somebody is trying to use their service to generate this kind of stuff at scale. If somebody's trying to generate just a handful of deep fakes, they're probably not going to figure it out. But if somebody is generating millions and millions of them or thousands and thousands of them, they may have some idea of what's going on. But that's not easy either, because, you know, there are many challenges for some of these firms in figuring out what's a deep fake and what's not, what's consensual, what's not. And so as a first issue, you know, the bad guys are continuously evolving. So that means that the actors in question are changing. The technology used to generate this stuff is changing. and it turns out, having studied deepfake detectors quite a lot and created some on my own with my lab, what we know is that small changes can make a big difference. So to give you an example, if I'm drinking this cup of coffee and there's a deepfake of me with part of my face obscured as I'm drinking that cup of coffee, it's harder in many cases for many detectors to figure out that video clip of me saying something which I probably never said is not true Likewise the definition Kerry I not speaking from a legal perspective but for a normal person what constitutes an act that sexual in nature can vary a lot A sexualized act versus an actual act of some kind of sex, very different. Also, So the relative positions in which a sexual act is carried out, where certain body parts may be obscured, but other things may be clear, all that causes machine learning algorithms to detect deepfakes to have a lot of problems. So I think, you know, those are some of the challenges from a technical perspective in figuring these things out. So one analyst has said that some deepfake sites now offer APIs to people creating non-consensual images and video generators. Explain what that means. So when you go to a website, you're typing stuff in, a prompt or a query, or clicking on some buttons, and you get a response. An API is an application program interface, and it replaces you with a piece of computer code. And that piece of computer code is interacting in a different kind of language with the server behind the website you're going to. And so if somebody is using an API to generate deep fakes, that suggests that they are generating it at scale. That suggests that they have a piece of code that is shipping requests automatically through that piece of code to the server. And that server is sending back whatever they requested, in this case, some kind of sexualized image. That suggests somebody who's trying to do it at scale, who is, you know, who probably has his or her own databases of people they want to propose in these situations that they were never in to begin with. Indicators analysis also estimates that the nudifier economy may be worth up to $36 million a year. Lori, in your reporting on Mr. Deepfakes, you noted the financial incentives through the community members posting in the forum. Tell us about the incentives and talk about the money making, Laurie, here and for the platforms that host this content, too. Although for people who don't realize, Google says it doesn't allow apps that contain sexual content. Apple says the company's app store prohibits overtly sexual content. Both companies disabled searches for nudify in their app stores. We'll get to the workarounds in a second, but talk a little bit about the incentives, the financial incentives. It's interesting because when we were looking at this site, that wasn't a site that was a platform. It was a whole ecosystem that enabled this site to exist. And that included platform liability from a lot of these different companies. So, for example, you know, the incentive was you can go on. Not only can you view, you know, thousands of videos of sexually explosive deepfakes of your favorite celebrity, you can make your own. And this is why we believed Mr. Deepfakes was so dangerous. He was dangerous because he was creating an army of Mr. Deepfakes, because now there are all these creators on there, which is kind of pay to play. And there's a freemium model. And then there's this premium model where you can pay to have specialized deepfakes of public figures who didn't consent made. And so people were probably making more money than the guy behind Mr. Deepfakes off of this platform. It was creating a whole ecosystem. But what else enabled that ecosystem? First, I would go from a regulatory standpoint. The laws just hadn't caught up. And we saw this with non-consensual pornography. Oftentimes, tech moves quickly when there aren't the correct guardrails. Women and young folks are the first ones to feel that pain. But also, there were payment providers that were accepting payments on this platform. And so, it was all of these things, and we talk about these small steps, that actually helped enable this ecosystem to exist. And one of the coolest things we saw, because I think so many folks would say, well, it's a game of whack-a-mole. You go after this guy, and then there are all these other ones that are going to pop up. But actually, what ended up happening is we did go after this guy. We found out who he was, and I think maybe most alarming was he wasn't a technical guy. This is a guy who was, I would say, in his 30s, worked at a pharmacist at a hospital helping people, was newly married, had a young child. And he had been able to create a website that enabled a whole new wave of deepfake abuse because he had an interest in technology and deepfakes. And he saw an opening because when Reddit banned sexually explicit deepfakes, we were able to track where his username was talking about seeing an opportunity that could be profitable and getting other people to build on this. And so all of these things together created, I would say, an ecosystem that allowed it. And all of these things also, once people started chipping away at this, once the laws started slowly but surely catching up, once Google deranked the platform, there were all sorts of small steps that actually created a friction that made it harder to exist. So let's shift to the current laws and regulations surrounding deepfake porn, including the Take It Down Act, the law that makes it a federal crime to publish non-consensual explicit deepfakes. The federal government began enforcing it in May. Carrie, in your pursuit of tech platform accountability, you've come up against Section 230, as have many, the law that protects platforms for being held legally liable for content that users post. You mentioned product liability law as a way to stop deepfake porn and get justice for victims. So talk about using product liability law. Section 230 was intended to basically just immunize platforms for content that third parties created and posted. But when it comes to deep fakes, especially like in the situation of Grok, we're saying that Grok was the one who created this material and also published it. And therefore, Section 230 shouldn't apply at all. But even if it does, by suing them under product liability, we're suing them not for publishing the content, but for, you know, basically harming people through its defective design, defective manufacturing. These were all foreseeable uses. There's no reasonably safe use for a nudifying product. And so that's just like a second way to overcome Section 230. Now, XAI, they haven't fully exposed what their defenses are going to be in our case. But when they were opposing the temporary restraining order, they were claiming that they wanted, I mean, so far this would be the only AI product that is saying that Section 230 should apply to it and that they're not responsible for what people type in as prompts. But even more alarming is that they're claiming that they should have the First Amendment protections and that Grok should basically be protected under free speech, which is a pretty alarming idea, you know, that that AI and a chatbot would have free speech rights. They don't, you know, so far we're not at a point where we're giving constitutional rights to a chatbot. But again, the arguments haven't yet hit the stage where they've been fully briefed yet. So, V.S., talk about workarounds, because a lot of these companies are very clever in terms of workarounds. Porn people have always been very clever. How easy is it to do workarounds here from a technological point of view? You know, I was thinking about this when Lori was speaking earlier, Kara. You know, she talked about a website where somebody goes in and says, I want to create a deep fake of such and such person doing such and such thing. And so that's a classic example of a place where that website is using the APIs that you asked about earlier to access a cloud provider where this code running to generate the notification of the sort desired by whoever asked the query. But now, think about it this way. Let's say the platform has the mechanism. Let's say they have a perfect mechanism. That doesn't exist today, but suppose they did, to detect a deepfake video of some form of sexual activity. Then the workarounds for the porn guys, there are some simple ones. So one of the classic methods to generate deepfakes, regardless of whether it's for good or bad, is something called stable diffusion. So in stable diffusion, what you do is you, let's say, throw in an image. I'll use an image rather than a video as my example. But you throw in an image of somebody, and that image gets converted to some very coarse representation. You know, think of this as something that's a very skeletal version of that image. And then what ends up happening is that skeletal version goes through the nudification process. but at the skeletal level. So that skeletalized, nudified image doesn't look anything like what a real nude might look like. And so you can think of it as some kind of computationally weird representation of a person who's about to be sexually abused via a deep fake. And then They could do all this on platform, on a cloud, and then without ever passing the source image or the final image, they bring back this coarse representation of the nudified image and perform the last step back on their own servers where it generates the final nude. So that's an example of one way in which somebody with just limited computer science knowledge who's familiar with the code, who has access to all this code, can generate something while avoiding the guardrails of some of the platforms, even if those guardrails are close to perfect. We'll be back in a minute. Thank you. You can show you at iHeartAdvertising.com. That's iHeartAdvertising.com. This is Chelsea Handler from Dear Chelsea. Every week, the news gets worse, the world gets crazier, and Yamanika is here to tell whoever's responsible, you're the problem. If you come over here to play games, I'ma check you, okay? If you do some in the news that don't sound good, I'ma play you. Join Yamanika Saunders as she breaks down the week's most problematic stories on our new podcast, You're the Problem with Yamanika. Do you know I just found out who Sydney Sweeney was? New episodes weekly every Wednesday as part of my new network, the Dear Chelsea Network. If he got a bunch of women, then I should have a bunch of men. Do better or do less so I don't have to do so much. So join Yamanika each episode as she answers one question. Who's the problem? I'm Yamanika and I'm out. Listen to You're the Problem with Yamanika on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What's up, fam? I'm sports journalist Ari Chambers. Hey, what's up, y'all? It's your girl, Sam J. And we're the hosts of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from Together and iHeart Women's Sports. Because let's be real, women's sports is giving us way too much to talk about these days. So Kelsey Fendler, she became the first female solo rower to go from California to Hawaii. My first thought is like, what's up with the snacks? Like, what are we eating? The highlights, the rivalries, the breakout stars, the moments that take over your entire timeline. And the conversations that start during the game and somehow keep going all week. Every week, we're breaking down the biggest stories across women's sports. Naomi Osaka showing out. She beat Sabalenka. Shout outs to you, Naomi. You get the palm, Naomi. I mean, you get the palm for that. Because we're not just interested in what happened. We're interested in why everyone's talking about it. Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Jake Brennan, and on the Disgraceland podcast, I explore the wild lives of rock stars and unbelievable true crime stories from music history. These are the stories you haven't heard, The kind you'll end up telling someone else. Like the time Paul McCartney spent in one of the world's most notorious prisons. Imagine that. You're Paul McCartney. It's 1980. You're an ex-Beatle. And you're doing time in one of Japan's worst prisons right there alongside Yakuza gangsters and for a ridiculous charge. Or the bizarre crime Lady Gaga is accused of. Who is the artist Lady Gaga is being accused of doing the unthinkable to after allegedly stealing her music and style to become famous? And what about that time Blondie's Debbie Harry escaped a serial killer? The man who had given her that ride she barely escaped from was Ted Bundy. Listen to Disgraceland on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Defiance Act, which is aimed at allowing victims of non-consensual deepfags to sue for damages passed in the Senate and is currently stalled in the House, even though some states have criminalized deepfags, enforcement remains low. low. Lori, what extent are these laws effective when it comes to stopping or at least curbing the spread? It's happened before with credit card companies and certain businesses that, you know, things tend to slow things down. But in this case, how important is it to have the Take It Down and the Defiance Act? I'll answer, and I'm curious for Carrie's response too, but I think it's incredibly important. You know, the Take It Down Act, you know, forced tech companies to pay attention and quicker. It gives them 48 hours to take down non-consensual abuse. But oftentimes, when it comes to victims, it's really difficult to find recourse for this, you know? And so the Defiance Act would create civil penalties that would enable them to actually have the ability to go after the folks who have done this and have civil recourse, which I think makes a big difference. And when we started out on our search for Mr. Deepfakes, which was, let's just be honest, It's really a search for asking why is this allowed to happen. You know, there weren't a lot of state laws. And I will say a lot of the state laws and a lot of the victims and survivors we spoke to, unfortunately, the onus in many ways becomes on these survivors to speak out about it and help change laws. And they did in the state level, which, you know, the state laws changing, all of them varying in scope, civil criminal penalties actually were where a lot of these different victims initially had recourse, which is also scary to watch. as folks go after regulation at the state level, because oftentimes the federal government is just slow to move. I would say I hope that the Defiance Act passes. It can get through. I think this is a bipartisan issue because it's really a child safety issue as well. Right, which is how they're selling it. So, by the way, a Wired investigation found that Grok is still being used for non-consensual explicit content. This is despite regulatory scrutiny and multiple lawsuits, and after Musk's XAI said it would add restrictions. In response to an NBC investigation, the XSafety account posted, we strictly prohibit users from generating non-consensual explicit deepfakes and from using our tools to undress real people. Explain how some of these legal dynamics apply to XAI in that regard, since you're in a lawsuit with them, when it keeps showing up that they're doing the same thing you would accuse them of. Well, I mean, that statement that they say that it's against their regulations, and they're basically passing the blame to users. There's nothing in that statement that suggests that they are modifying their product so that deepfakes are no longer easy to create. And the problem with things like the Take It Down Act, it's great, you know, suddenly now there's a 48-hour window of time that tech platforms are supposed to remove illegal content, but it has no teeth because victims can't enforce it. Victims can't sue the platform and say, hey, you know, it's now been 48 days and that content is still up. So the problem with all regulations and all these options is that the victims cannot enforce them. And so when we're talking about who's the bad guy, VS has talked about the bad guys in these situations. In my view, the worst guys are the platforms. And so until we have regulations that put the victims in the driver seats to not just you know get criminal justice against the individuals but to actually get justice against the platforms you know I think the only recourse we have is to use our courts and make these companies pay So every episode we get a question from an outside expert. Here's yours, and you're all going to answer it. So let's listen to it first. Hi, I'm Georgia Wells, a tech reporter for The Wall Street Journal. I just finished a deep dive into the issue of teens using deepfake nudes to harass each other. And so the big question I would ask is that now that the government has just started enforcing the Take It Down Act, how might this change the harassment landscape for young people today? Thank you. Laura, you go first, then Carrie, then V.S. Yeah, I do agree a little bit with Carrie on saying, you know, there's only so much you can actually kind of enforce when the onus is on the victim. I do think from a cultural standpoint, it is very different than it was a couple years ago of federal law, take it down act. Again, state laws are at least sending this message that the stakes will be high and that young boys, young teenagers can get into real trouble for doing this and can get charged. I mean, I think that at least from a perspective of schools being able to speak to students, parents being able to speak to their children about this and having some structure will be helpful. Again, though, I'm not sure the take it down act is going to be the thing that's going to actually change this. I also agree with Kerry on platform liability and creating higher stakes for the tech companies and the whole ecosystem that enables this to happen. Kerry? So I think they'll get the memo that this is illegal. I mean, having criminal laws was really, really effective when we were dealing with the scourge of image-based sexual abuse over the last decade. We went from having three states to having 50 states with those laws. And my firm saw such an enormous and quick plummet of offenders creating images like that. So that's great. But we still don't have an apparatus that targets the platforms themselves and prevents them from basically monetizing this kind of humiliation. and until we have laws that victims can enforce themselves, like it's not really harming who I consider the true offenders. Right, which are the platforms themselves. All right, V.S.? You know, I have very mixed feelings about criminalizing a 13-year-old, all right? But at the same time, we need to protect perhaps other 13-year-olds or 14-year-olds or 10-year-olds from the consequences that accrue to them because of some 13-year-old putting out deepfake porn of that kid. So I think, you know, a first step has got to be something around education. A lot of our teachers in schools are simply not teaching their kids about deepfakes. And it's one thing if kids are using deepfakes or generative AI to, you know, create reports for their class projects. I mean, that brings up a whole bunch of other ethical issues. But it's another thing if they use deepfakes to explicitly cause damage to a kid and one of their classmates. So I think the ethics around this has got to be clearly articulated in class and by schools. And some of our schools may have done a good job of this. Others may not. And, you know, that education and the consequences of those actions in a school context are clear. I think it'll be challenging. You know, Vias, just to respond, if it's helpful, just to respond to that. I think the frustration is so many times, I agree, how do we expect 13-year-old boys to know that this isn't okay when they're getting served up notification apps on social media? You know, I think it is, it's an and. like two things can be true. And so there's a huge gap between education and being able to educate folks on this and what the platforms are allowing and what they say they're allowing and what's coming through. It creates a really difficult environment. You know, I worry generally about the broad statement or the broad platforms moniker. I think there's a wide variety in what different platforms are doing. Some platforms are going to a great amount of trouble spending a tremendous amount of money to try and perform the best innovation possible so they can put some of these problems to bed. And others are doing much, much less. So there's like a huge range of what platforms are doing, some doing relatively little, some making every effort to try and get there. Now, I want to add that, you know, again, even if platforms were doing their very best, There's a famous saying due to a statistician at the University of Wisconsin, all models are wrong, some are useful. All right. And so whatever models are being used by platforms to find these deep fakes, they're never going to be perfect. And so the question is, are they making the effort? Some are making what I would consider a very good faith effort. Some are simply doing the thing. Can you name who is doing a good job? I'd prefer to stay out of that, but I don't want to talk about specific platforms. But yeah. So let's end by looking at what individuals can do as deepfake technology continues to evolve. Carrie, now that the Take It Down Act forces tech companies to remove deepfake nudes, how do you request a takedown if you're targeted? Well, part of what the Take Down Act required was that there be a flow for people to easily request content removal. And so that kind of infrastructure, I really appreciated that being incorporated into the laws. So ideally, you know, a victim within the platform itself can now report it, you know, whether it's through a URL or if it's like Instagram or Facebook, then the image itself would ideally have a method to request removal. When digital forensics professor and deepfake expert Hani Farid was on the podcast in January, he expressed concerns that agentic AI will supercharge the creation of deepfakes in the coming months. VS, how do we make sure the new laws and policies don't block positive uses of these tools? So I think, again, we don't want to block the technology. We want the technology to evolve because, again, as Laurie said much earlier in the podcast today, you know, deepfakes do have the capacity to help do things like better understand disease. I'm not going to call this a deep fake, but the generative AI is being used to create new kinds of proteins that'll help cure diseases. Generative AI is being used to create materials that'll degrade and perform in ways that we would like, that would protect the environment and more. So I think what we have to do is to look at intent. What is the intent of the individual who is creating a deep fake. And in the case of the 13-year-old boy or 14-year-old boy who's creating deep fakes of one of his classmates because he's pissed off about something, I think there's intent. Whereas if somebody, you know, there was this guy who created a deep fake of the Pope, Pope Francis, in puffy robes and a very dapper looking version of him, you know, that I think is something that's laughable. And I find that, at least I find that somewhat entertaining. I doubt very much if the Pope was, you know, horribly offended. And so, you know, I think we want to allow artistic freedom and expression, scientific inquiry, but at the same time regulate so that it's the uses that are banned or that lead to. The individual intent one. Yeah. Laurie, in the end, you tracked down Mr. Deepfakes. What ultimately brought down the site? And where is he now? Great question. Where is he now? I would love to know. So eventually we did track him down with the help of, you know, investigative journalists, the internet, and some of our cybersecurity friends who did some pro bono work for us because they have kids and they viewed this as a real threat. And we were able to track him down. And, you know, Kara, like I'll never forget confronting him on his way into the office. And I do remember Carrie, who I've known because I've covered non-consensual pornography before I called her before going to his parents' home. to make sure that we did everything correct, just in case, you know, we didn't want to create any legal liabilities. But I will never forget him looking at me. He knew who I was with so much disdain. And I know this is a delusional part of me, but there was a part of me that thought maybe we would have tracked this guy down and we could show up and say, do you understand the real harm this site is causing? You're a father. And I remember he walked right into the hospital. He wouldn't say a word to me and the doors closed. And I remember thinking at that point, well, we're going to have to go talk about this to everyone who will listen to us. And that has to change because we have to change culture as a part of this. This can't be where the story ends. He can't just take himself off social media, which he did, and continue running this site. And so a lot of things happened, which I think were really exciting. I mean, we, I think, were one of the first to show up and threaten his anonymity. Say, you cannot do this type of abuse and remain anonymous. So that was friction. That exposure was friction. A law started changing. When in the UK, they started talking about different types of laws that would make it harder for folks to access Mr. Deepfakes. They cut off access to folks in the UK. That created friction. A very valuable server went down for them. The Take It Down Act passed. The CBC published their investigation as well. Mr. Deepfakes finally went offline for good. And I think it was such a great lesson in all of these players that actually impact how we build out a better future. And the headline is friction. It just created more and more friction. Now, what's happened to him, I think, is actually is just as important of a headline, which is nothing, really. I mean, he lost his job at the pharmacy. But we've talked to many folks, law enforcement. I actually spoke to a couple different folks in Canada from the law enforcement perspective. There's no open investigations into David Doe. That's his name. And there's thoughts that maybe he's left the country. But that's it. And I think that in and of itself tells its own story. Absolutely. So the last question, defape foreign obviously isn't going away. So what's the best possible outcome? Each of you, what is your most optimistic case for how it pans out in the next five years and how we get there? Carrie, you go first and then VS and Lori, you get the last word. Carrie? Okay. Well, it should probably come as no shock to you that my best case outcome is that the companies that unleashed these harms and profited significantly from them should have to pay. And there should be disgorgement and compensation for all the victims. And it should be financially penalizing for these companies. So that would be your best. And is that a possible outcome? Do you feel like that's a possible outcome? I mean, we're on that road with litigation. We'll see how it works. I also, you know, I do condemn the platforms like the App Store and Google Play, who for many, many years were offering and selling nudifying apps. And they just kind of were ostriches with their head in the sand, pretending like they didn't think these things were harmful. I'm really sick and tired of platforms not doing anything until something becomes actually criminal. You know, they deny that it's harmful until there's an actual criminal law. VS? You know, that's what I would like in place. some kind of criminal law that says, well, look, here are the kinds of behaviors and even intended behaviors or intended outcomes that should be criminalized. Here are the penalties that you will face if you engage in these acts. And this needs to be something that's at least in the U.S. nationwide. But more importantly, many of these actors are going to be overseas. And so what we need is not just U.S. law, but law in various countries and some broad international agreements, perhaps enforced by an organization like Interpol, which polices things like child trafficking already. They should be authorized to do and investigate things like this. That's a very good point. That's exactly where it goes. It's broad. What happens is immediately it goes abroad. Lori, last word. Look, I agree with what everyone here has said. So I will end with saying, you know, my gripe with Silicon Valley, and I have a lot of gripes with Silicon Valley, is they're sitting there talking about AGI and what happens when AI becomes smarter than us. And it doesn't matter. It really doesn't matter because here's what's happening here on earth. Over here in reality, we have children who are ending their lives because of deepfake sextortion and people are sleeping on it. My hope is that I don't have to shout into the ether for years and say, this is real harm, this is real harm, that we can get better education, that we can change culture to understand that when new technology comes quickly without the correct guardrails, the folks who are impacted oftentimes are the ones that don't have the voice, and we can make some changes from there. Now, it doesn't take, to Kerry's point, oftentimes it takes criminal law. If I'm sitting in my seat, oftentimes it takes public pressure and investigations. I'd love to get to a world where Silicon Valley maybe has some different folks in it. And this isn't the last thought as people are having dinner and talking about AGI after taking a cold plunge. That's it. That's a very good point. But you're going to wait a long time for that. Thank you. But I can manifest it. I'm manifesting it right here. Go ahead. All right. Sure. Why not? Why not? Anyway, I really appreciate it, all three of you. It's a really important talk. And we're going to keep coming back to it again and again and hopefully see something happen by raising awareness of it for sure. Thank you so much, all three of you. Thank you, Cara. Pleasure to be here. Thank you so much. Thanks. We've reached out to XAI and X for comment. They did not respond. Today's show was produced by Michelle Alloy, Catherine Millsop, Madeline LaPlante-Duby, and Kaylin Lynch. Special thanks to Lissa Sowep, Anika Robbins, and Julia Sharp-Levine. Our engineers are Fernando Arruda and Rick Kwan, and our theme music is by Trackademics. Nishat Kerwa is Vox Media's executive producer of podcasts. Go wherever you listen to podcasts, search for On with Kara Swisher and hit follow. Thanks for listening to On with Kara Swisher from Podium Media, New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast Network and us. We'll be back on Monday with more. What's up, fam? It's sports journalist Ari Chambers. Hey, what's up, y'all? It's your girl, Sam Jay. And we're the hosts of Everyone Watches Women's Sports, a new podcast from together. We're breaking down the biggest headlines, the viral moments, and the stories everyone's talking about across women's sports. From game-changing performances to culture-shifting conversations, we'll give you our takes, our debates, and a few laughs along the way. Because everyone watches women's sports. Listen to Everyone Watches Women's Sports on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is Chelsea Handler from Dear Chelsea. Every week, the news gets worse, the world gets crazier, and Yamanika is here to tell whoever's responsible, you're the problem. Do you know I just found out who Sidney Sweeney was? If he got a bunch of women, then I should have a bunch of men. Do better or do less so I don't have to do so much. I'm Yamanika, and I'm out. Listen to You're the Problem with Yamanika on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. 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