This was not unexpected given how Alex Soros has been ramping up the attacks on -Q- and their followers, as well as the Combs stuff.
AOC opens up about seeing deepfake AI porn of herself online (nypost.com)
Now I seem to remember a lot of talk about this video back when she first started her political career. Is this from the same video and her hens have come home to roost, or is this really an AI generated thing?
So lets look at something else from New York State.
CONGRESSMAN JOE MORELLE AUTHORS LEGISLATION TO MAKE AI-GENERATED DEEPFAKES ILLEGAL | Representative Morelle (house.gov)
AOC opens up about seeing deepfake AI porn of herself online (nypost.com)
Quote: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has opened up about her own horrifying experience of becoming the victim of AI-generated deepfake porn — warning that it is “not as imaginary as people want to make it seem.”
The Queens Democrat said she was scrolling through X while talking about legislation with her aides in a car in February when she came face to face with the AI-generated image of herself performing a sex act.
“There’s a shock to seeing images of yourself that someone could think are real,” Ocasio-Cortez told Rolling Stone. “As a survivor of physical sexual assault, it adds a level of dysregulation. It resurfaces trauma, while I’m trying to … in the middle of a f–king meeting.”
Now I seem to remember a lot of talk about this video back when she first started her political career. Is this from the same video and her hens have come home to roost, or is this really an AI generated thing?
So lets look at something else from New York State.
CONGRESSMAN JOE MORELLE AUTHORS LEGISLATION TO MAKE AI-GENERATED DEEPFAKES ILLEGAL | Representative Morelle (house.gov)
Quote:
Today, Congressman Joe Morelle announced he has authored and introduced legislation to protect the right to privacy online amid a rise of artificial intelligence (AI) and digitally-manipulated content. The Preventing Deepfakes of Intimate Images Act would make illegal the non-consensual sharing of altered or “deepfake” intimate images online and create additional legal courses of action for those impacted.
“The spread of A.I.-generated and altered images can cause irrevocable emotional, financial, and reputational harm—and unfortunately, women are disproportionately impacted,” said Congressman Joe Morelle. “As artificial intelligence continues to evolve and permeate our society, it’s critical that we take proactive steps to combat the spread of disinformation and protect individuals from compromising situations online. I’m proud to have introduced this legislation that takes common-sense steps to protect their privacy, and I look forward to working with my colleagues to pass it into law.”
SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher said: "I applaud Congressman Morelle for introducing the Preventing Deepfakes of Intimate Images Act against sexualized non-consensual digital replicas and ‘deepfakes'. This bill will help curb an incredibly destructive practice that strikes at the heart of personal privacy, safety and autonomy. Sexual abuse, whether occurring physically or digitally, should never be excused or permitted as ‘personal expression’, and it should never be tolerated. Deepfakes are violations, objectification and exploitation, and must be made illegal and punishable by law. This bill is a powerful step to ensure that this technology is not used to cause harm. If we continue to spiral into an abyss where we fail to discern between what is real and what is not real, we are looking at a future far more dangerous than sexual exploitation and objectification.”
Dr. Mary Anne Franks, President and Legislative & Tech Policy Director of the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative said: “The unauthorized creation and distribution of digitally manipulated intimate images, like other forms of image-based sexual abuse, can cause severe and often irreparable psychological, reputational, and professional harm. The Cyber Civil Rights Initiative welcomes the Preventing Deepfakes of Intimate Images Act as an important effort to deter this form of sexual exploitation that disproportionately targets women and girls.”
With advancements in technology and artificial intelligence has come the emergence of “deepfakes”—digitally altered images that use an individual’s likeness mapped onto a photo or video of someone else. A 2019 report found that 96 percent of deepfake videos online were pornographic in content and exclusively targeted women. While the videos are fake, their impacts are very real—and until now, little has been done to provide women with protection or recourse from this disturbing phenomenon.
Quote:This was from the Congressman's home page and is dated May 5, 2023.
I'm willing to bet that Cortez isn't really worried about a "Deepfake" video of her doing something, but rather of the "Casting Couch" video coming out exposing how she got picked to run for office. I wonder if old Georgie Soros is not remembering where he left his tapes again?