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Posted: 2019-06-23T11:00:17Z | Updated: 2019-06-23T11:00:17Z

On a busy workday in March, 28-year-old Kate felt an urgent tap on her shoulder. Her colleague wanted to show her a video, so she glanced at his computer and was shocked to see her own face staring back, wincing and moaning. She appeared on-screen to be lying naked on a couch with her legs in the air while a man repeatedly penetrated her.

Kate felt sick. Her co-workers, whod gathered around to see what was going on, instantly fell silent when they saw the video. It looked real and even identified Kate by name, but she knew it couldnt be. Beyond the obvious shed never done porn she could tell it wasnt her body; only the face was hers. It had to be some kind of hoax but would other people believe it?

It was horrifying, Kate, who lives in Texas, told HuffPost. Id never seen anything like it.

The video, which is still online and has tens of thousands of views, is a deepfake a doctored video created with artificial-intelligence software that can make someone appear to do or say anything. Deepfake algorithms use a dataset of videos and images of an individual to create a virtual model of their face that can be superimposed and manipulated. In Kates case, her face was swapped onto a porn actress head.

When its Photoshop, its a static picture and can be very obvious that its not real, said Kate, whos been the target of previous misogynistic attacks. But when its your own face reacting and moving, theres this panic that you have no control over how people use your image.

At first, deepfake porn almost exclusively featured female celebrities; their television and movie appearances gave video creators plenty of material to work with. But now, as the technology has advanced and become more broadly accessible, ordinary women with even a small selection of public photos or videos of themselves are being targeted too.

HuffPost spoke to six women who have been digitally inserted into porn without their consent. Those quoted here are identified by pseudonyms to protect their privacy, and are speaking out to call attention to an issue thats been left to fester in the shadows.

Most public discussion on deepfakes thus far has centered on the potential political problems they could cause in the future, even though they already pose a real threat to women. Lawmakers have fretted about how the videos could hypothetically make a presidential candidate appear to say something defamatory on the eve of next years election. Satirical deepfakes of actor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg have recently dominated headlines as warnings of whats to come.

Meanwhile, as deepfake porn continues to upend womens lives, theres been little media coverage, and there still exists no criminal recourse for victims.

The harm done to women when it comes to this kind of sexual objectification is happening now, said Mary Anne Franks, a law professor at the University of Miami and president of the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative . Its almost like people have forgotten that this is what this technology really started out as, and the conversation around women has fallen away.

Deepfakes Are Rooted In Misogyny

Deepfakes have been weaponized against women for as long as theyve existed. The term deepfake was coined in 2017 by an anonymous Reddit user who shared doctored porn videos like the one above, which portrays Wonder Woman star Gal Gadot. Today, major porn websites are filled with deepfakes, despite promises to ban them . (MindGeek, which owns Pornhub and other erotic video sites, did not respond to repeated requests for comment about the no-deepfakes policy it announced more than a year ago.)

Other tech platforms have wavered in their approach to deepfakes hosted on their sites, torn between calls to stamp out disinformation and to protect free expression. Inside the federal government, legislators have started to sound the alarm about the videos, and a few have introduced bills to regulate them, such as the DEEPFAKES Accountability Act from Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.). But so far, none have resulted in action.

Once something is uploaded it can never really get deleted. It will just be reposted forever.

- Tina, a victim of nonconsensual deepfake porn

Without any such intervention or effective policies in place, deepfake porn has carved out a comfortable space online and its thriving. In addition to free, easy-to-use deepfake generator apps, there are now photo search engines (which HuffPost wont name) that allow people to upload pictures of individuals to find porn actresses with similar features for optimal face-swapping results. There are even deepfake porn forums where men make paid requests for professional-looking videos of specific women, and share links to the womens social media profiles for source imagery. HuffPost has observed requesters seeking porn with female Twitch, YouTube and Instagram influencers, as well as the requesters own co-workers, friends and exes.

On one such forum in March, someone asked for a sex video of Tina, a 24-year-old Canadian woman, and dropped a link to her YouTube channel. Four days later, a deepfake popped up that appeared to show her bent over naked on a bed with one man thrusting behind her and another stroking his penis near her head. The video, which is virtually seamless, is still up with thousands of views.

I was definitely shocked and disturbed, Tina, who learned of the video when an acquaintance sent her a link, told HuffPost. It felt really weird and gross to see my face where it shouldnt be.

The video poster and claimed creator is a middle-aged man, according to his profile. Tina has no idea who he is. She thought about trying to get the video taken down, but didnt see a point once she realized it had already been shared to other websites.

You know how the internet is once something is uploaded it can never really get deleted, she said. It will just be reposted forever.