‘Digital public shaming’: Chinese AI tools under fire for pornographic deepfakes
Grass-roots group warns AI platforms have ‘sacrificed women’s right to safety’ as non-consensual sexualised images proliferate

Doubao, owned by tech giant ByteDance, is China’s leading chatbot in terms of users. According to data published by mobile internet information provider QuestMobile, Doubao had 155 million weekly active users as of late December, while DeepSeek had 81.6 million.
ByteDance has not replied to the South China Morning Post’s request for comment.
“For many women, a face they once believed to be uniquely their own has become raw material in a digital landscape where it can be extracted, altered and sexually degraded at will,” the article said.
While AI deepfakes have emerged as a global concern, prompting many countries to develop regulatory guard rails, effective regulation remains limited in China, according to Free Nora.