Digital exploitation is becoming a new battleground in survivor advocacy
Artificial intelligence is opening a new front in the fight against sexual exploitation as realistic image and video manipulation tools become increasingly accessible to the public. Deepfake technology has made it possible to alter videos and photographs in ways that appear authentic, leading to the creation of fake sexual content featuring real individuals without their knowledge or consent. For many survivors, concerns involving medical sexual abuse and other forms of exploitation are now being compounded by digital victimization that continues long after the original harm occurred. Survivors frequently discover fabricated images or videos of themselves circulating online, forcing them to relive feelings of humiliation, fear, and violation they worked hard to overcome. This emerging form of abuse, often described as synthetic sexual exploitation, blurs the line between reality and fiction while causing genuine psychological damage. Many survivors report feeling as though they are being victimized repeatedly, with their identities stripped away and their privacy permanently compromised. Because technology evolves faster than legislation, accountability remains difficult to achieve. Victims often seek assistance from attorneys experienced in representing survivors as they navigate complicated issues involving internet privacy, digital evidence, and content removal. In many cases, civil litigation becomes one of the few available tools for removing harmful content and pursuing compensation for ongoing harm. These lawsuits are increasingly forcing technology companies and policymakers to confront the unintended consequences of artificial intelligence and the role it can play in facilitating abuse.
According to Europol’s 2025 Internet Crime Threat Assessment, more than 85 percent of deepfake videos circulating online are pornographic in nature, with women and known survivors frequently targeted. The report notes that free AI image-generation tools have dramatically lowered barriers to creating explicit content, allowing almost anyone to generate and distribute manipulated sexual imagery within minutes. For survivors, the consequences can be devastating, including anxiety, depression, panic attacks, employment difficulties, and suicidal thoughts. Mental health professionals increasingly refer to this phenomenon as digital retraumatization because victims are forced to repeatedly confront a new version of their original abuse through technology. Law enforcement agencies around the world continue struggling to keep pace with offenders who exploit jurisdictional loopholes and host illegal content across international borders. Advocacy groups are calling for stronger international agreements that classify nonconsensual deepfake sexual content as a form of sexual abuse, allowing victims to pursue justice regardless of where the content originates. At the same time, lawmakers in several countries are introducing legislation that criminalizes the creation and distribution of AI-generated sexual content without consent. Technology companies have also begun investing in automated detection systems designed to identify manipulated content before it spreads widely. However, experts caution that technology alone cannot solve a problem that technology helped create. Meaningful reform will require stronger laws, faster removal procedures, and reporting systems that place survivors at the center of the response.
The rise of AI-driven exploitation demonstrates that sexual abuse can now extend beyond physical spaces as in medical sexual abuse, and into the digital world. Survivors already coping with trauma should not have to fight new battles against synthetic content created without their consent. As lawmakers, courts, and technology companies work to address these threats, advocates emphasize that protecting survivors must remain the priority. Real progress will likely require a combination of legal accountability, technological safeguards, and survivor-centered support systems capable of responding quickly when abuse occurs online. The challenge is significant, but growing awareness may help ensure that future technologies are used to protect vulnerable individuals rather than re-victimize them.