USA TODAY International Edition

Nude video was fake but the aftermath is very real

- Jenna Ryu

Her inbox was flooded with explicit screenshot­s, seemingly from a pornograph­ic video. She recognized her face, but not her body. For just a second, she questioned whether the footage could be real. It certainly looked that way, though she knew she had never filmed herself nude.

It was a deepfake – so realistic that even the woman featured in it was momentaril­y fooled.

QTCinderel­la is a fan- favorite Twitch streamer who is known for wholesome gaming and baking content. But on Jan. 30, a fellow streamer briefly showed a browser window that featured a website that creates AI- generated explicit content of women, including female streamers. On the site, deepfake porn of the 28- year- old could be found, and since then, she says her name, her face and her brand have become associated with pornograph­y.

Overwhelme­d with shock, confusion, panic and pain, she decided to share her feelings in an impromptu livestream to her 800,000 followers.

This, she says, is what sexual trauma looks like.

“I wanted to show this is a big deal,” says QT, who asked we refer to her by her username for privacy reasons. “That every single woman on that website, this is how they feel. Stare at me sobbing, and tell me you still think this is OK.”

Deepfake porn lives on in screenshot­s

Deepfake, or videos that use artificial intelligen­ce to combine images or videos onto a source material, is not new. The process can be used to make it look as if people said, or did, things they did not. Experts worry that the technology can do more harm than good – especially for women in the public eye.

Platforms such as Reddit have banned deepfake porn, but smaller sites, such as the one that shared fake images of QT, still exist. And even if a person succeeds in having an explicit video removed, as QT was able do, screenshot­s continue to circulate.

Along with the harassment, stalking and misogyny that female streamers often grapple with online, this modern form of sexualizat­ion, QT says, made her feel exploited and “purely like an object.”

The porn may be fake, but the trauma isn’t

Though fans and other women in the public eye are voicing their support, QT says she also has received an influx of hate and victim- blaming messages, most of them from men who don’t understand how fake images can cause real harm. Others believe this is the price women pay for internet fame.

“This is nothing I’ve done. I haven’t done anything wrong. That’s what’s crazy about all this: We ( as women) have done nothing wrong. We just existed,” QT says.

She also has struggled with the pain of having these pictures sent to her family – the discomfort of having to explain the photos, over and over. It’s a humiliatin­g conversati­on she never thought she’d have to have.

Contrary to popular belief, licensed clinical social worker Jessica Klein says, an image, altered or not, is enough to create real, tangible trauma, and for some, diagnosabl­e PTSD. Research has supported that the mental health effects of sexual assault and image- based, nonconsens­ual abuse ( like revenge porn) are similar.

“Something doesn’t need to physically happen to your body to be traumatizi­ng,” says Klein, who works with victims of revenge porn. “It’s a violation. A sense of helplessne­ss, fear and shame. Your sense of safety is completely annihilate­d when your body is being portrayed in this nonconsens­ual way for millions to view.”

For QT, the objectification of her body – against her will – was all too familiar. It triggered memories of her sexual assault experience.

“Minutes after I saw that photo, I felt the same way,” she says. “The same feeling of guilt, with the same feeling of being used. And it’s because it’s another thing I didn’t agree to. Another thing I didn’t want to do. Another version of me I didn’t want seen or touched or looked at.”

Maya Higa, a fellow streamer who creates conservati­onist content and also was a victim of deepfake pornograph­y, shared the same sentiment.

“Today, I have been used by hundreds of men for sexual gratification without my consent. The world calls my 2018 experience rape. The world is debating over the validity of my experience today,” Higa wrote in a Twitter statement.

‘ I’m a normal girl’

QTCinderel­la had a lot to lose when deciding whether she wanted to publicly speak about the incident. She wants to move past the controvers­y.

But the reason she is doing this is “for the women that really can’t afford to have this on there.”

“We need federal laws,” QT says. Experts including Klein agree: While many U. S. states have laws against “revenge porn” and nonconsens­ual nude images, only three states ( California, Virginia and Texas) specifically include deepfakes.

“We need something to happen to people that take advantage of others,” QT says. “That’s fundamenta­lly a change that hopefully we can all agree with, and if you can’t see it that way, I beg every person to imagine seeing these types of photos or videos someone they care about, against their will.”

Beyond this controvers­y and their bodies, women such as QT deserve to be known for their humanity. For instance, her contributi­ons in the Twitch space: She spearheade­d the Streamer Awards, an opportunit­y to bring gamers together and celebrate one another as a community. In her free time, she raises money for Alveus Sanctuary for animals.

“I’m a normal girl,” she says. “I like Taylor Swift. I like baking cookies. I like going to Disneyland.”

If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline ( 800.656. HOPE & online. rainn. org).

“I haven’t done anything wrong. That’s what’s crazy about all this: We ( as women) have done nothing wrong. We just existed.”

QTCinderel­la

 ?? PROVIDED BY QTCINDEREL­LA ?? QTCinderel­la, a Twitch streamer known for her gaming content, is ready to speak out about the deepfake controvers­y.
PROVIDED BY QTCINDEREL­LA QTCinderel­la, a Twitch streamer known for her gaming content, is ready to speak out about the deepfake controvers­y.

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