Take It Down Act Introduces Federal Penalties for Online Sexual Exploitation

Summary:

Le président Donald Trump a signé lundi la loi Take It Down, une mesure bipartite qui renforce les sanctions contre la distribution d’images explicites non consensuelles, notamment les deepfakes et le revenge porn. Cette loi criminalise la publication de telles images, qu’elles soient réelles ou générées par IA, et impose aux plateformes sociales de retirer ces contenus sous 48 heures après notification de la victime. Bien que plusieurs États aient déjà interdit ces pratiques, c’est la première fois que des régulateurs fédéraux interviennent.

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President Donald Trump signed the Take It Down Act on Monday, a bipartisan law that enacts stricter penalties for distributing nonconsensual explicit images, including deepfakes and revenge porn. The bill criminalizes the publication of such images, whether they’re authentic or AI-generated. Whoever publishes the photos or videos can face criminal penalties, including fines, imprisonment, and restitution. Under the new law, social media companies and online platforms must remove such material within 48 hours of notice from the victim. The platforms also have to take steps to delete duplicate content. Many states have already banned sexually explicit deepfakes and revenge porn, but this will be the first time federal regulators step in to impose restrictions on internet companies. “This will be the first-ever federal law to combat the distribution of explicit imagery posted without subjects’ consent,” Trump said during a bill signing event Monday at the White House. “We will not tolerate online sexual exploitation.” First Lady Melania Trump lobbied for the bill, which was sponsored by Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.). Cruz said he was inspired to act after hearing that Snapchat refused for nearly a year to remove an AI-generated deepfake of a 14-year-old girl. Free speech advocates and digital rights groups have raised concerns, saying the law is too broad and could lead to censorship of legitimate images, like legal pornography, as well as government critics.

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