Written by Suhani Roy Chowdhury,
Lex Lumen Research Journal Summer Intern,
June 2026
Introduction
The digital revolution has transformed communication, workspaces and social interactions in unprecedented ways. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has emerged as one of the most transformative technologies of the twenty-first century. It has revolutionized communication, healthcare, education, governance, and workplace efficiency. However, alongside its benefits, AI has also created new avenues for abuse. One of the most concerning developments is the rise of deepfake technology, which uses artificial intelligence and machine learning to create highly realistic but fabricated images, videos, and audio recordings. While deepfakes have legitimate applications in entertainment, accessibility, and creative industries, they are increasingly being weaponized against individuals, particularly women.
The misuse of deepfakes has raised serious concerns regarding privacy, dignity, reputation, and workplace safety. Women are disproportionately targeted through non-consensual sexualized content, manipulated videos, and fabricated recordings designed to humiliate, intimidate, or discredit them. The consequences often extend beyond the digital world, affecting careers, mental health, personal relationships, and social standing. As workplaces become increasingly digitized, deepfakes have also emerged as a new tool for workplace harassment, creating challenges that traditional legal and organizational frameworks are often ill-equipped to address.
This article examines the phenomenon of deepfakes, their impact on women’s digital rights, their role in workplace harassment, and the legal and policy measures necessary to combat this growing form of technology-facilitated abuse.
Deepfakes: More Than Just Digital Manipulation
Deepfakes are products of sophisticated artificial intelligence systems capable of generating highly realistic synthetic media.[1] By analyzing large volumes of photographs, videos, and voice recordings, AI can recreate a person’s appearance and speech with startling accuracy. The result is content that appears genuine even though it is entirely fabricated.
The danger associated with deepfakes stems from their ability to blur the distinction between truth and fiction. Unlike traditional edited photographs, modern deepfakes can be convincing enough to deceive viewers, employers, law enforcement agencies, and even victims’ acquaintances. As the technology becomes more accessible, individuals with little technical expertise can create manipulated content using readily available software and applications.
Although deepfakes can be used for creative and educational purposes, their misuse has grown rapidly. Fabricated videos, cloned voices, and altered photographs are increasingly employed to spread misinformation, commit fraud, intimidate individuals, and engage in online harassment.[2]Women have emerged as the primary targets of many of these abuses, particularly where manipulated content contains sexual or degrading elements.
Women’s Digital Rights Under Threat
The expansion of online spaces has made digital rights an essential component of human rights. [3]Privacy, dignity, equality, and freedom of expression must be protected not only in physical environments but also in virtual ones. Deepfakes threaten each of these rights in significant ways.
Privacy is often the first casualty.[4]Images used to create deepfakes are frequently obtained from social networking sites, professional profiles, or publicly accessible sources without the individual’s knowledge or permission. A woman’s digital presence can therefore be transformed into harmful content against her will.
Dignity is equally affected. Deepfake pornography and manipulated videos frequently portray women in humiliating circumstances designed to embarrass or discredit them. Even when the content is proven false, the emotional impact can be devastating.
[5]The right to reputation is also endangered. Careers built over years of effort can be undermined by a single fabricated video. Because digital content spreads rapidly and is difficult to erase completely, victims often continue to suffer long after the falsity of the material has been established.
Most importantly, deepfakes challenge gender equality. Women who fear becoming targets may limit their participation in online discussions, public life, or professional leadership roles. In this way, technological abuse can indirectly silence voices and reinforce existing social inequalities.
Deepfakes as a New Form of Gender-Based Violence
Gender-based violence has traditionally been associated with physical acts, but modern technology has created new methods of victimization.[6]Deepfakes illustrate how digital tools can be used to perpetuate abuse in ways that are psychological, social, and professional rather than physical.
A significant proportion of malicious deepfake content consists of [7]non-consensual sexual imagery. Such material is often created not for financial gain but to shame, intimidate, or exert power over women. Victims may experience fear, humiliation, anxiety, and loss of confidence, regardless of whether viewers understand that the content is fabricated.
The harm extends beyond the internet. Relationships may be damaged, employment opportunities lost, and personal safety threatened. For women in visible professions such as politics, journalism, law, academia, and business, deepfakes can become powerful tools of intimidation intended to discourage public participation.
Workplace Harassment in the Digital Era
The nature of workplace harassment has evolved alongside technological change. While inappropriate comments, discrimination, and unwelcome conduct remain common concerns, digital platforms have introduced new forms of misconduct that can occur both inside and outside traditional office settings.
Remote work arrangements, virtual meetings, and online communication tools have expanded professional interactions beyond physical workplaces. Unfortunately, these same tools can be misused to harass colleagues, spread false information, or create hostile environments.
[8]Deepfakes represent a particularly dangerous development because they allow individuals to manufacture convincing evidence of misconduct that never occurred. A fabricated video showing an employee engaging in unethical behavior or making offensive statements can seriously damage professional relationships before its authenticity is questioned.
[9]Women are especially vulnerable when manipulated content takes a sexualized form. Such attacks often aim to undermine credibility, weaken professional authority, and subject victims to ridicule among colleagues.
Consequences for Victims
The effects of deepfake harassment are often profound and long-lasting. [10]Psychological consequences may include stress, anxiety, depression, and a persistent fear of public exposure. Victims frequently report feeling powerless because digital content can be copied, shared, and reuploaded indefinitely.
Professional consequences can be equally damaging. Employees targeted by deepfakes may face reputational harm, strained workplace relationships, reduced opportunities for advancement, and loss of trust among clients or colleagues. In severe cases, individuals may leave their jobs or withdraw from public-facing roles altogether.
The social impact should not be underestimated. Deepfakes can affect personal relationships, community standing, and overall quality of life. The distinction between online and offline harm becomes increasingly blurred when digital abuse produces tangible real-world consequences.
The Need for Legal and Institutional Reform
[11]Although existing laws like Information Technology Act,2000 relating to privacy, defamation, cybercrime, and harassment may provide some remedies, many legal systems remain inadequately prepared to address the unique challenges posed by synthetic media. The speed with which deepfakes can be created and distributed often exceeds the capacity of traditional enforcement mechanisms.
A comprehensive response requires legal reform, stronger workplace policies, and greater accountability from technology companies. Employers should recognize AI-generated harassment as a workplace issue and establish clear reporting mechanisms for victims. Technology platforms must invest in detection tools and adopt faster procedures for removing harmful content.
[12]Governments should also consider dedicated legislation addressing non-consensual deepfake creation and distribution, particularly where women are targeted through sexually explicit or defamatory material. Such measures would provide clearer protections while reinforcing the principle that digital abuse deserves the same seriousness as offline misconduct.
Conclusion
Deepfake technology demonstrates that technological progress is not inherently beneficial or harmful; its impact depends on how it is used. While artificial intelligence offers remarkable possibilities, its misuse has created new threats to privacy, dignity, and equality. Women continue to bear a disproportionate share of these harms, particularly in cases involving sexualized content and workplace harassment.
The challenge posed by deepfakes extends beyond individual victims. It threatens public trust, weakens professional environments, and undermines confidence in digital communication itself. Addressing this issue requires coordinated action from lawmakers, employers, technology companies, and civil society. Only through a combination of legal protection, institutional accountability, and technological safeguards can digital spaces remain safe and inclusive for all users.
[13]As society moves deeper into the age of artificial intelligence, protecting women’s digital rights must become a central priority. Technological innovation should empower individuals, not become a means of silencing, humiliating, or exploiting them.
References
[1] Robert Chesney & Danielle Keats Citron, Deep Fakes: A Looming Challenge for Privacy, Democracy, and National Security, 107 Calif. L. Rev. 1753 (2019).
[2] Deeptrace Labs, The State of Deepfakes 2019 (2019).
[3] Universal Declaration of Human Rights arts. 1, 12 & 19, G.A. Res. 217A (III), U.N. Doc. A/810 (Dec. 10, 1948).
[4] Danielle Keats Citron, Sexual Privacy 105–10 (2022).
[5] Puttaswamy v. Union of India, (2017) 10 S.C.C. 1.
[6] U.N. Women, Online and ICT Facilitated Violence Against Women and Girls During COVID-19 (2020).
[7] Deeptrace Labs, The State of Deepfakes 2019 (2019).
[8] Danielle Keats Citron, Hate Crimes in Cyberspace 143–47 (2014).
[9] Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, No. 14 of 2013, India Code (2013).
[10] Clare McGlynn, Erika Rackley & Ruth Houghton, Beyond “Revenge Porn”: The Continuum of Image-Based Sexual Abuse, 25 Feminist Legal Stud. 25 (2017).
[11] Information Technology Act, No. 21 of 2000, §§ 66E, 67, 67A, India Code (2000).
[12] Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India, (2017) 10 S.C.C. 1.
[13] U.N. Human Rights Council, The Promotion, Protection and Enjoyment of Human Rights on the Internet, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/32/L.20 (2016).
