MPs amend bill criminalizing sexual deepfakes to include ‘nearly nude’ images
OTTAWA — A House of Commons committee has amended a proposed bill that would criminalize sexual deepfakes to ensure it covers “nearly nude” images.
The change to Bill C-16 comes after experts warned the original version of the bill would likely not incorporate many of the images created by Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot that proliferated on his X platform at the beginning of this year.
The original version of the bill would have criminalized the non-consensual sharing of images which show the subject nude, exposing their sexual organs or engaged in explicit sexual activity. The images created by Grok — such as edits to photos of women to depict them wearing see-through bikinis — may not meet that standard.
MPs on the justice committee voted in favour of amendments put forward by Conservative MP Andrew Lawton that would change the definition to include images where the person is nude or “nearly nude.”


