Public Citizen Testimony in Support of HB 421 — Regulating Intimate Deepfakes
Public Citizen Testimony in Support of HB 421 -- Regulating Intimate Deepfakes
To: Chairman Jeff Leach and the Members of the House Committee on Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence
CC: Rep. Ann Johnson, Rep. Harold V. Dutton, Jr., Rep. Paul A. Dyson, Rep. Lulu Flores, Rep. Jessica González, Rep. Richard Hayes, Rep. Marc LaHood, Rep. Brooks Landgraf, Rep. Joe Moody, Rep. Mike Schofield
Via hand delivery and by email.
From: Ilana Beller and Adrian Shelley, Public Citizen, ashelley@citizen.org, 512-477-1155
Re: HB 421, explicit deepfakes – Public Citizen testimony in support
Dear Chairman Leach and Members of the Committee:
On behalf of our approximately 30,000 members in Texas, Public Citizen encourages the House Committee on Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence to advance HB 421, a legislative proposal regulating intimate deepfakes. Deepfakes are fabricated content (videos, images, or audio) created with the use of generative artificial intelligence (A.I.) that depict a person saying or doing things that they never actually said or did in real life. An intimate deepfake is a fabricated depiction of an individual nude and/or engaging in sexual acts.
There has been an exponential rise in the circulation of intimate deepfakes in recent years. In 2023, there were over 95,000 deepfake videos circulated online.1 Deepfake fraud worldwide has increased by more than 10 times from 2022 to 2023.2 Currently, 98 percent of all deepfakes circulated online are intimate deepfakes.3 On Telegram alone, there are at least 50 bots that claim to create explicit photos or videos of people with only a couple of clicks. These bots have over 4 million monthly users combined.4
It is worth noting, the vast majority (99%) of those victimized by intimate deepfakes are women and girls. A study conducted by the Center for Democracy and Technology found that 15% of students were aware of at least one intimate deepfake of someone associated with their school.5
Intimate deepfakes cause serious harm to innocent people.6 Victims report experiencing significant emotional consequences and trauma,7 as well as damage to their reputation and career. In October 2023, more than 30 teen girls at a highschool in New Jersey were violated when A.I. generated intimate images of them were circulated around their school.8 These girls reported feeling humiliated, exposed, and traumatized. Unfortunately, this is not just a singular incident. Cases of young people being victimized by intimate deepfakes have been reported in schools all across the country including schools in Texas, California, Washington.
Intimate deepfakes can be used for monetary extortion as well. The FBI recently warned the public of “sextortion” schemes,9 in which intimate deepfakes are used to extort victims for monetary gain. In addition to causing financial loss, victims report experiencing severe mental health issues and dozens have taken their own lives.10
Recent advances in the realm of A.I. have made it such that tools needed to create deepfakes are now widely accessible. It only takes a few dollars and a few minutes to create a deepfake.11 Meanwhile, the quality of deepfake technology is improving rapidly, making it harder for the average person to detect a deepfake. A study conducted by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers found that even four years ago, that more than 75% of the time, people could not correctly identify good quality deepfake videos.12 This problem continues to grow exponentially as technology quickly advances.
Without regulation, anyone can fall victim to this traumatizing form of exploitation. New legislation like HB 421, which regulates the circulation of intimate deepfakes, is critical to protecting innocent people.