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More than a dozen adult entertainment stars have established a campaign against right-wing efforts to ban pornography.
As of January 2024, of the most popular 100 videos on Pornhub, 4.1 billion views were for step-incest videos and 3.3 billion views were for all other videos combined.
“But enabling deepfakes is out of the question, period,” an OpenAI employee told NPR.
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A day earlier, Texas passed a law requiring porn sites to verify their users are at least 18.
The 15-year-old girl is doing what she can to fight back against a deepfake porn “epidemic,” her lawyer told The Daily Beast.
The tool has been used by online groups to generate nude photos of celebrities.
David French’s New York Times column tries, and fails, to make the case that online age verification laws are now constitutional, even though they weren’t 20 years ago.
Alexandra Bendit is asking the company to cough up $500,000 for, among other things, intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The pontiff told a group of seminarians that not all pornography is criminal, but even the “normal” stuff can let the devil in.
Nevvy Cakes grew up homeless, bouncing from place to place. Then, the pandemic—and OnlyFans—happened. Now, she says she’s pulling in $2.5 million a year.
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