bā xī巴西jǐng gào警告:AIhé和shēn dù深度wěi zào伪造kě néng可能gěi给fù nǚ妇女hé和nǚ hái女孩dài lái带来“gāo fēng xiǎn高风险”
Brazil has recently seen several worrying incidents: some students used AI to create fake pornographic images of classmates and teachers and spread them online.
Researchers say this is not a minor issue, because gender-based violence online and offline are often connected.
Data show that Brazil recorded 1,568 cases of women being killed in 2025, more than in the previous year.
Another study found that 98% of deepfake videos online are pornographic, 99% of the victims are women, and this kind of content increased sharply over one year.
Experts believe that AI training data may be biased, so the tools can also harm women and girls.
Brazil is now discussing new rules that require platforms to manage content more seriously, put safety first when designing products, and treat “non-consensual pornographic deepfakes” as high-risk behavior and strictly ban them.
Experts also suggest that schools strengthen digital education to help young people understand how algorithms, platforms, and AI work, and learn to use the internet safely and responsibly.
As Brazil’s elections approach, AI may also be used to create political attacks targeting women, which has made many people even more worried.