Save Log in , register or subscribe to save articles for later. Save articles for later Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Got it Normal text size Larger text size Very large text size “See anybody nude for free,” the website’s tagline reads.
“Just paint over the clothes, set age and body type, and get a deepnude in a few seconds.” More than 100,000 people use the “Undress AI” website every day, according to its parent company. Users upload a photo, choose from picture settings like “nude”, “BDSM” or “sex”, and from age options including “subtract five”, which uses AI to make the subject look five years younger.
The result is a “deepnude” image automatically generated for free in less than 30 seconds. Undress AI is currently legal in Australia, as are dozens of others. But many do not have adequate controls preventing them from generating images of children.
More than 100,000 people use the “Undress AI” website every day, its parent company claims, including Australians. There is evidence that paedophiles are using such apps to create and share child sexual abuse material, and the tools are also finding their way into schools, including Bacchus Marsh Grammar in Melbourne , where an arrest was made earlier this month. Advertisement The use of technology to create realistic fake pornographic images, including of children, is not new.
Perpetrators have long been able to use image-editing software such as Photosho.