HomeAmericaSpanish feminist targeted by AI fakes wants stricter onlineĀ regulations

Spanish feminist targeted by AI fakes wants stricter onlineĀ regulations

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By David Latona

MADRID, Feb ā€Œ27 (Reuters) - A Spanish women's rights activist who suffered online abuse, ​including AI-generated fake nude images, said the government's pledge to regulate social media does not go ⁠far enough, calling for anonymous accounts to be made traceable to end impunity for digital violence.

As Europe's push to rein in U.S.-based tech giants is shifting ​from fines and takedown notices to stiffer measures, Madrid wants to impose a ban on ā€Œunder-16s accessing social media and criminal liability for platform executives who fail to remove illegal or hateful content.

France, Greece and Poland are weighing similar measures after Australia became ⁠the first country to block social media for children under 16 ⁠in December. 

Carla Galeote, a 25-year-old lawyer and prominent online feminist commentator, told Reuters governments were reacting only now because digital violence had become impossible to ignore, although the problem predated AI.Ā 

"Social media isn't new - and the violence is brutal, systematic, ā€Œ24/7," Galeote said. "What hit me hardest wasn't the deepfake, it was going to ⁠the police and being told it wasn't even a ā€Œcrime."

She dismissed plans to ban children from social ​media as "paternalistic", arguing all users, regardless of age, need protection from digital abuse.

Spain's proposed law has sparked backlash from tech company executives, who accuse Prime Minister ā€ŒPedro Sanchez of threatening free speech. Galeote, however, believes ​regulation and freedom of expression can ⁠coexist.

"It's impossible to think that a man on the street could ā€Œshout that they'll rape you and nothing ⁠happens, but that's what we're seeing online," she said.Ā 

Instead of imposing easily absorbable fines, Galeote advocated barring platforms from major markets, like the European Union, for repeated ​violations.Ā 

While defending pseudonymous online use, ā€ŒGaleote emphasized the need for traceable identities behind all accounts.Ā 

"Call yourself 'PeppaPig88' if you ⁠want - fine. But there has to be ​a real identity behind that account," she said.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing ​by Aislinn Laing and Andrei Khalip)

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