Penalty for AI Generated Child Abuse Images
November 8, 2024
Whenever new technology is released it’s only a matter of time before a bad actor uses it for devious purposes. Those purposes are usually a form of sex, theft, and abuse. Bad actors saw a golden opportunity with AI image generation for child pornography and ArsTechnica reported that: “18-Year Prison Sentence For Man Who Used AI To Create Child Abuse Images.” Hugh Nelson, the pedophile from the UK used a 3D AI software to make child sexual abuse imagery. When his crime was discovered, he was sentences to eighteen years in prison. It’s a landmark case for prosecuting deepfakes in the UK.
Nelson used Daz 3D to make the sexually explicit images. AI image algorithms use large data models to generate “new” images. The algorithms can also take preexisting images and alter them. Nelson used photographs of real children, fed them into Daz 3D, and had deepfake SA images. He also encouraged other bad actors to do the same thing. Nelson will be incarcerated until he completes two-thirds of his sentence. The judge at the trial said Nelson was a “significant risk” to the public.
Since these images are fake, one could argue that they’re harmless but the problem here was the use of real children’s images. These real kids had their visage transformed into sexually explicit images. That’s where the debate about harm and intent enters:
“Graeme Biggar, director-general of the UK’s National Crime Agency, last year warned it had begun seeing hyper-realistic images and videos of child sexual abuse generated by AI. He added that viewing this kind of material, whether real or computer-generated, “materially increases the risk of offenders moving on to sexually abusing children themselves.”
Greater Manchester Police’s specialist online child abuse investigation team said computer-generated images had become a common feature of their investigations.
‘This case has been a real test of the legislation, as using computer programs in this particular way is so new to this type of offending and isn’t specifically mentioned within current UK law,’ detective constable Carly Baines said when Nelson pleaded guilty in August. The UK’s Online Safety Act, which passed last October, makes it illegal to disseminate non-consensual pornographic deepfakes. But Nelson was prosecuted under existing child abuse law.”
My personal view is that Nelson should be locked up for the remainder of his putrid existence as should the people who asked him to make those horrible images. Don’t mess with kids!
Whitney Grace, November 8, 2024
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