Nude images of teens are being created with AI apps, alarming parents
- Comments
Students are now using AI apps to create fraudulent nude images of classmates
SmartSocial founder Josh Ochs and Don Austin, the superintendent of the Palo Alto Unified School District, spoke with Fox News Digital about this emerging trend.
Join Fox News for access to this content Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account - free of charge. By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News' Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive. Please enter a valid email address. By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News' Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.A troubling trend has emerged in schools across the United States, with young students falling victim to the increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered "nudify" apps that have the power to create fake pornography of classmates.
"Nudify" is an umbrella term referring to a plethora of widely available apps and websites that allow users to alter photos of full-dressed individuals and virtually undress them. Some apps can create nude images with just a headshot of the victim.
Don Austin, the superintendent of the Palo Alto Unified School District, told Fox News Digital that this type of online harassment can be more relentless compared to traditional in-person bullying.
"It used to be that a bully had to come over and push you. Palo Alto is not a community where people are going to come push anybody into a locker. That doesn't happen. But it's not immune from online bullying," Austin said.
‘SOUND OF FREEDOM’ PRODUCER SAYS AI TOOLS HELPED NAB CHILD TRAFFICKER THAT ELUDED FBI FOR 10 YEARS

Education experts are warning parents that teens are now using AI apps and websites to create nude images of their peers. (Catherine McQueen/Moor Studio/Getty)
"The differences, I think, are worse. Now your bully can be completely anonymous. You don't even know where it's coming from," he continued.
Austin noted that conversations with mental health professionals have unearthed another troubling trend wherein kids who have become the victim of online bullying can become "addicted" to searching for negative content about themselves.
"They're looking, monitoring the exact place where the harm is coming from," he said.
Growing up in the 1980s, Austin recalled how a student could do something stupid on a weekend and peers would whisper and talk about that individual on a Monday.
Flash-forward to the early days of the internet when Austin was starting his professional career: at this point, students could post pictures and comments about classmates and display that to the entire school.
PROTECTING YOUR DAUGHTER FROM DEEPFAKES AND ONLINE ABUSE

AI-generated images, known as "deepfakes," often involve editing videos or photos of people to make them look like someone else or use their voice to make statements they never uttered in reality. (Elyse Samuels/The Washington Post/Lane Turner/The Boston Globe/STEFANI REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)
"We're at a place now where you can be doing nothing and stories and pictures about you are posted online. They're fabricated. They're completely made up through AI and it can have your voice or face. That's a whole other world," he told Fox News Digital.
Last August, the office of the San Francisco City Attorney filed a lawsuit accusing 16 "nudify websites" of violating nonconsensual intimate images and child abuse material laws. In the first half of 2023, the websites in question were visited over 200 million times.
The parent companies of the apps that create these hyper-realistic "deepfake pornography" images have largely remained unscathed by state legislation. However, at least one state, Minnesota, is considering a bill that would hold them accountable for certain image generations.
TEEN DEEPFAKE PORNOGRAPHY VICTIM WARNS FUTURE GENERATION IS 'AT RISK' IF AI CRIME BILL FAILS

Texas teen Elliston Berry speaks on the Take It Down Act, which requires social media companies to restrict deepfake porn on their platforms. (Fox News/Screengrab)
Though technology will likely always outpace policy, Austin stressed the importance of ongoing collaboration and communication between educators, parents, and students to redefine acceptable behaviors and provide support for those affected by AI and social media.
Nearly a decade ago, Austin fostered a working relationship with SmartSocial founder Josh Ochs, whose organization hosts weekly live events that teach parents how to keep their kids safe online.
Ochs told Fox News Digital that in a growing number of cases, these apps are subjecting school-aged teens to humiliation, harassment and online sexual exploitation. The creation of these images can also lead to legal ramifications.
"Kids these days will upload maybe a headshot of another kid at school and the app will recreate the body of the person as though they're nude. This causes extreme harm to that kid that might be in the photo, and especially their friends as well and a whole family," he told Fox News Digital.
AI ‘DEEPFAKES’ OF INNOCENT IMAGES FUEL SPIKE IN SEXTORTION SCAMS, FBI WARNS

A woman in Washington, D.C., views a manipulated video on January 24, 2019, that changes what is said by President Donald Trump and former president Barack Obama, illustrating how deepfake technology has evolved. (Rob Lever /AFP via Getty Images)
Ochs emphasized the importance of parents having open and frequent dialogues with their children about online safety and the dangers of these apps, while also taking an interest in their personal lives.
Though some parents push to give their kids greater autonomy and privacy, Ochs said parents should have access to their children's devices and social media accounts (via the passcode), just as they would have a spare set of keys to a car.
"Before you give your kids a phone or social media, it's time to have that discussion early and often. Hey, this is a loaner for you, and I can take it back at any time because you could really hurt our family," he said.
The U.S. Senate in February unanimously approved a bill by Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., that would make it a federal crime to publish, or threaten to publish, nonconsensual intimate imagery, including "digital forgeries," also known as deepfakes, crafted by AI.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
(责任编辑:时尚)
- 2013伤感qq个性签名大全 依然想做个无忧无虑的孩子
- 《英雄无敌:上古纪元》森林派系预告 城镇美轮美奂
- AG Bondi says Dems 'detached from reality' on Kilmar Abrego Garcia deportation
- 影视:同时穿越了无数世界
- 乌克兰危机爆发后俄首都居民区首次遭袭,普京发声!
- 让写作插上想象的翅膀
- 比ChatGPT贵1000倍,每月14.5万元,OpenAI两大新推理模型曝光
- 醒图怎么把图片弄成圆形
- 2020伤感心情说说一句话 下次见面我们该是陌生人了
- 周琦重返CBA受阻!无缘加盟青岛,17岁天才崛起,地位力压大魔王
- 美特使称普京愿与乌克兰达成永久和平协议
- 2023年北京各区小学升初中时间安排表汇总
- 茶水煮饭好处多 防病养生又好吃
- 巧克力,想说爱你不容易
- 《光与影:33号远征队》Steam在线超7万 CEO竟来自育碧
- 将遗憾写的淋淋尽致的签名 暗含不开心的签名大全
- 关于缺陷的哲理故事汇总
- 晒下厨做饭的精致美好朋友圈文案 人气超高的晒下厨的短句
- 伤感签名大全2013最新版的 彻底的报复是原谅和遗忘
- 冯小刚新作《向阳·花》定档清明 赵丽颖领衔全阵容霸气亮相
- 2018精选优美的伤感签名文字 少给我一点希望 views+
- 2022全新很骚气的羞羞文案 很羞羞的搞笑说说大全 views+
- 影视欢喜:乔卫东纳妾宋倩狂飙 views+
- 对方不回消息时怼别人的文案 巧妙的怼别人不回消息的句子 views+
- 死死拿捏对象的高端撒娇小情话 小情话说给对象听的每天腻歪不重样 views+
- 、Love me, love my dog views+
- 不用油做出健康的排骨:炖出来的红烧排骨 views+
- 弱智又搞笑的问题语录 很智障问题搞笑句子 views+
- 抖音特效怎么弄 18183手机游戏网 views+
- 排毒仅仅为了美容养颜? views+