Safeguarding Faces in the AI Age
Washington, D.C., United States,Wed Feb 18 2026
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The recent rise of a chatbot that could generate and share millions of sexualized images of real people sparked a debate about how to protect individuals from digital misuse.
Congress already banned posting deep fakes that show people in intimate acts, but experts argue the law should also cover any unauthorized use of a person’s likeness.
A common‑law right lets people control the commercial use of their image, and this principle can be expanded to prevent harmful AI‑created photos.
While the law must leave room for political satire and news reporting, it should stop images that are made to deceive or harm. The balance is important: protecting privacy and image rights should not silence legitimate journalism.
The problem is that AI tools make it easy for anyone to produce shocking images at a moment’s notice. Even if one platform tightens its controls, open‑source technology can still be used to replicate the damage.
The issue ties into privacy because being shown naked in a fake photo feels like an invasion. Yet the stronger argument comes from the right to own one’s image: taking a photo of someone clothed and then superimposing their face onto a naked background is a clear misuse for the creator’s benefit.
This right should apply to all images, not just sexual ones, and it must cover any unauthorized use that benefits the producer. AI‑generated fictional faces are exempt, but real people’s images should not be freely exploited.
To keep free speech intact, the law must exempt news edits that do not mislead and protect parodies of public figures.
Ultimately, the goal is to make it clear that an image belongs to its subject; without consent, others cannot turn it into something unwanted or harmful.
https://localnews.ai/article/safeguarding-faces-in-the-ai-age-acda2e22
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