President Trump has now signed the Take It Down Act, criminalizing sexual deepfakes at a federal degree within the US. On the similar time, the CivitAI group’s bid to ‘clear up its act’ concerning NSFW AI and celeb output has finally didn’t appease cost processors, main the positioning to hunt options or face shutdown. All this within the mere two weeks for the reason that oldest and largest deepfake porn website on the earth went offline…
It has been a momentous few weeks for the state of unregulated picture and video deepfaking. Simply over two weeks in the past, the quantity #1 area for the group sharing of superstar deepfake porn. Mr. Deepfakes, instantly took itself offline after greater than seven years in a dominant and much-studied place as the worldwide locus for sexualized AI superstar content material. By the point it went down, the positioning was receiving an common of greater than 5 million visits a month.

Background, the Mr. Deepfakes area in early Could; inset, the suspension discover, now changed by a 404 error, for the reason that area was apparently bought by an unknown purchaser on the 4th of Could, 2025 (https://www.whois.com/whois/mrdeepfakes.com). Supply: mrdeepfakes.com
The cessation of companies for Mr. Deepfakes was formally attributed to the withdrawal of a ‘vital service supplier’ (see inset picture above, which was changed by area failure inside every week). Nevertheless, a collaborative journalistic investigation had de-anonymized a key determine behind Mr.Deepfakes straight previous to the shutdown, permitting for the chance that the positioning was shuttered for that particular person’s private and/or authorized causes.
Across the similar time, CivitAI, the business platform broadly used for superstar and NSFW LoRAs, imposed a set of surprising and controversial self-censorship measures. These affected deepfake era, mannequin internet hosting, and a broader slate of latest guidelines and restrictions, together with full bans on sure marginal NSFW fetishes. and what it termed ‘extremist ideologies’.
These measures had been prompted by cost suppliers apparently threatening to withdraw companies from the area until modifications concerning NSFW content material and superstar AI depictions had been made.
CivitAI Minimize Off
As of immediately, it seems that the measures taken by CivitAI haven’t appeased VISA and Mastercard: a new publish† on the website, from Group Engagement Supervisor Alasdair Nicoll, reveals that card funds for CivitAI (whose ‘buzz’ digital cash system is usually powered by real-world credit score and debit playing cards) might be halted from this Friday (Could twenty third, 2025).
This can forestall customers from renewing month-to-month memberships or shopping for new buzz. Although Nicoll advises that customers can preserve present membership privileges by switching to an annual membership (costing†† $100-$550 USD) earlier than Friday, clearly the long run is considerably unsure for the area right now (It must be famous that annual memberships went stay on the similar time that the announcement in regards to the lack of cost processors was made).
Relating to the shortage of a cost processor, Nicoll says ‘We’re speaking to each supplier snug with AI innovation’.
As to the failure of current efforts to adequately rethink the positioning’s oft-criticized insurance policies round celeb AI and NSFW content material, Nicoll states within the publish:
‘Some cost corporations label generative-AI platforms excessive threat, particularly once we permit user-generated mature content material, even when it’s authorized and moderated. That coverage selection, not something customers did, compelled the cutoff.’
A remark from consumer ‘Faeia’, designated as the corporate’s chief of employees of their CivitAI profile*, provides context to this announcement:
‘Simply to make clear, we’re being faraway from the cost processor as a result of we selected to not take away NSFW and grownup content material from the platform. We stay dedicated to supporting all types of creators and are engaged on various options.’
As a conventional driver of latest applied sciences, it isn’t unusual for NSFW content material for use to kick-start curiosity in a site, expertise or platform – just for the preliminary adherents to be rejected as soon as sufficient ‘legit’ capital and/or a user-base is established (i.e., sufficient customers for the entity to outlive, when shorn of a NSFW context).
It appeared for some time that CivitAI would observe Tumblr and numerous different initiatives down this route in direction of a ‘sanitized’ product able to overlook its roots. Nevertheless, the extra and rising controversy/stigma round AI-generated content material of any variety represents a cumulative weight that appears set to stop a last-minute rescue, on this case. Within the meantime, the official announcement advises customers to undertake crypto as a substitute cost technique.
Faux Out
The appearance of President Donald Trump enthusiastically signing the Federal TAKE IT DOWN Act is more likely to have influenced a few of these occasions. The brand new regulation criminalizes the distribution of non-consensual intimate imagery, together with AI-generated deepfakes.
The laws mandates that platforms take away flagged content material inside 48 hours, with enforcement overseen by the Federal Commerce Fee. The legal provisions of the regulation take impact instantly, permitting for the prosecution of people who knowingly publish or threaten to publish non-consensual intimate pictures (together with AI-generated deepfakes) inside the purview of the USA.
Whereas the regulation obtained uncommon bipartisan help, in addition to backing from tech corporations and advocacy teams, critics argue it might suppress legit content material and threaten privateness instruments like encryption. Final month the Digital Frontier Basis (EFF) declared opposition to the invoice, asserting that the takedown mechanisms it mandates goal a broader swathe of fabric than the narrower definition of non-consensual intimate imagery discovered elsewhere within the laws.
‘The takedown provision in TAKE IT DOWN applies to a much wider class of content material—probably any pictures involving intimate or sexual content material—than the narrower NCII definitions discovered elsewhere within the invoice. The takedown provision additionally lacks vital safeguards in opposition to frivolous or bad-faith takedown requests.
‘Providers will depend on automated filters, that are infamously blunt instruments. They steadily flag authorized content material, from fair-use commentary to information reporting. The regulation’s tight timeframe requires that apps and web sites take away speech inside 48 hours, hardly ever sufficient time to confirm whether or not the speech is definitely unlawful.
‘In consequence, on-line service suppliers, notably smaller ones, will probably select to keep away from the onerous authorized threat by merely depublishing the speech moderately than even making an attempt to confirm it.’
Platforms now have as much as one yr from the regulation’s enactment to ascertain a proper notice-and-takedown course of, enabling affected people or their representatives to invoke the statute in looking for content material removing.
Which means though the legal provisions are instantly in impact, platforms usually are not legally obligated to adjust to the takedown infrastructure (akin to receiving and processing requests) till that one-year window has elapsed.
Does the TAKE IT DOWN Act Cowl AI-Generated Celeb Content material?
Although the TAKE IT DOWN Act crosses all state borders, it doesn’t essentially outlaw all AI-driven media of celebrities. The act criminalizes the distribution of non-consensual intimate pictures, together with AI-generated deepfakes, solely when the depicted particular person had a affordable expectation of privateness:
The act states:
“(2) OFFENSE INVOLVING AUTHENTIC INTIMATE VISUAL DEPICTIONS.—
“(A) INVOLVING ADULTS.—Besides [for evidentiary, reporting purposes, etc.], it shall be illegal for any individual, in interstate or overseas commerce, to make use of an interactive laptop service to knowingly publish an intimate visible depiction of an identifiable particular person who is just not a minor if—
“(i) the intimate visible depiction was obtained or created below circumstances wherein the individual knew or moderately ought to have recognized the identifiable particular person had an inexpensive expectation of privateness;
“(ii) what’s depicted was not voluntarily uncovered by the identifiable particular person in a public or business setting [i.e., self-published porn];
“(iii) what’s depicted is just not a matter of public concern; and
“(iv) publication of the intimate visible depiction—
“(I) is meant to trigger hurt; or
“(II) causes hurt, together with psychological, monetary, or reputational hurt, to the identifiable particular person.
The ‘affordable expectation of privateness’ contingency utilized right here has not historically favored the rights of celebrities. Relying on the case regulation that ultimately emerges, it is attainable that even specific AI-generated content material involving public figures in public or business settings could not fall below the Act’s prohibitions.
The ultimate clause about figuring out the extent of hurt is famously elastic in authorized phrases, and on this sense provides nothing notably novel to the legislative burden. Nevertheless, the intent to trigger hurt would appear to restrict the scope of the Act to the context of ‘revenge porn’, the place an (unknown) ex-partner publishes actual or pretend media content material of an (equally unknown) different ex-partner.
Whereas the regulation’s ‘hurt’ requirement could appear ill-suited to instances the place nameless customers publish AI-generated depictions of celebrities, it might show extra related in stalking situations, the place a broader sample of harassment helps the conclusion that a person has intentionally and maliciously focused a public determine throughout a number of fronts.
Although the Act’s reference to ‘coated platforms’ excludes non-public channels akin to Sign or e-mail from its takedown provisions, this exclusion applies solely to the duty to implement a proper removing mechanism by Could 2026. It doesn’t imply that non-consensual AI or actual depictions shared via non-public communications fall outdoors the scope of the regulation’s legal prohibitions.
Clearly, an absence of on-site reporting mechanisms doesn’t hinder affected events from reporting what’s now unlawful content material to the police; neither are such events precluded from utilizing no matter typical contact strategies a website could make obtainable to make a criticism and request the removing of offending materials.
The Rights Left Behind
Greater than seven years of mounting public and media criticism over deepfake content material seem to have culminated inside an unusually quick span of time. Nevertheless, whereas the TAKE IT DOWN Act affords sweeping federal prohibitions, it might not apply in each case involving AI-generated simulations, leaving sure situations to be addressed below the rising patchwork of state-level deepfake laws, the place the legal guidelines handed usually mirror ‘native curiosity’.
For example, in California, the California Celebrities Rights Act limits the unique use of a star’s id to themselves and their property, even after their demise; conversely, Tennessee’s ELVIS Act focuses on safeguarding musicians from unauthorized AI-generated voice and picture reproductions, with every case reflecting a focused strategy to curiosity teams which are outstanding at state degree.
Most states now have legal guidelines concentrating on sexual deepfakes, although many cease wanting clarifying whether or not these protections prolong equally to personal people and public figures. In the meantime, the political deepfakes that reportedly helped spur Donald Trump’s help for the brand new federal regulation could, in observe, run up in opposition to constitutional obstacles in sure contexts.
† Archived model: https://internet.archive.org/internet/20250520024834/https://civitai.com/articles/14945
†† Archived model (doesn’t characteristic month-to-month costs): https://internet.archive.org/internet/20250425020325/https://civitai.inexperienced/pricing
* The precise ‘chief of employees’ to the CEO at CivitAI is listed at LinkedIn below an unrelated identify, whereas the similar-sounding ‘Faiona’ is an official CivitAI employees moderator on the area’s subreddit.
First revealed Tuesday, Could 20, 2025