Taylor Swift recently found herself caught in the crosshairs of digital deception when fake explicit snapshots of her surfaced on Twitter.

 

Rabat – Last week, sexually explicit AI-generated images of Taylor Swift circulated on X, formerly Twitter.

 

One particularly prominent example on X garnered over 45 million views, 24,000 reposts, and hundreds of thousands of likes and bookmarks.

 

The post remained live for approximately 17 hours before it was removed.

 

In various regions of the internet, “Taylor Swift AI” has been trending, leading to wider dissemination of the images.

 

X has since restricted searches for Taylor Swift, displaying, “Something went wrong. Try reloading,” when her name is queried, as reported by Reuters.

 

Joe Benarroch, head of business operations at X, stated that, “This is a temporary action and done with an abundance of caution as we prioritize safety on this issue.”

 

The incident has even garnered national attention. White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre labeled the fake images “alarming” and emphasized the responsibility of social media companies to curb misinformation.

 

The circulated images depict the singer in red body paint in explicit poses alongside Kansas City Chiefs fans.

 

According to a report from 404 Media, the images most probably originated from a Telegram group where users exchange explicit AI

generated images of women, utilizing Microsoft Designer.

 

As per insights from 404 Media, Sarah Bird, Microsoft Responsible AI Engineering Lead, acknowledged the situation, stating, “We are committed to providing a safe and respectful experience for everyone.” She continued, “We are continuing to investigate these images and have strengthened our existing safety systems to further prevent our services from being misused to help generate images like them.”

 

According to news outlet Daily Mail, Swift is contemplating legal action against the deepfake website responsible for circulating the AI-generated images.

 

Social media has rallied in support of Swift, with her fans, known as the Swifties, launching campaigns and using hashtags like “#Protecttaylorswift” and “#Respecttaylorswift” to demonstrate unwavering solidarity.