Sonos Era 100 Review How to Download iOS 16.4 Save 55% on iPhone Cases How to Sign Up for Google's Bard Apple's AR/VR Headset VR for Therapy Clean These 9 Household Items Now Cultivate Your Happiness
Want CNET to notify you of price drops and the latest stories?
No, thank you
Accept

Sharing deepfake revenge porn is now a crime in Virginia

A state law makes distributing "falsely created" images and videos a misdemeanor.

gettyimages-847829238.jpg
Virginia law against revenge porn has expanded to include deepfakes. 
Getty Images

Virginia's ban on revenge porn now includes deepfake images and videos.

An updated law, which took effect Monday, expands upon an existing law that says anyone who shares or sells nude or sexual images and videos to "coerce, harass, or intimidate" is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor. The update adds language about "a falsely created videographic or still image," as reported earlier by Ars Technica.

The Virginia General Assembly passed the updated bill in March, when it was also signed by Gov. Ralph Northam.

Deepfakes are leading to growing concern about privacy. Last week, an app called DeepNude, which uses artificial intelligence to morph pictures of clothed women into nudes, shut down. Samsung also developed an AI system that can create a fake clip from a single picture. Last year, Reddit banned deepfake porn

Now playing: Watch this: Senate takes on deep fakes with Sheryl Sandberg and Jack...
4:05