![]() In the same year, Chinese actor Huang Xiaoming released nude photos that sparked public controversy, but they were ultimately proven to be real pictures. In 2012, when Liu Yifei's fake nude photography released on the network, Liu Yifei Red Star Land Company declared a legal search to find out who created and released the photos. In 2012, South Korean police identified 157 Korean artists of whom fake nudes were circulating. In 2011, a 53-year-old Incheon man was arrested after spreading more fake pictures of the same group. In 2010, 97 people were arrested in Korea after spreading fake nude pictures of the group Girls' Generation on the internet. "Deepfakes", which use artificial neural networks to superimpose a person's face into a pornographic image or video, were popularized in the late 2010s, leading to concerns about the technology's use in fake news and revenge porn. ![]() In the 1990s and 2000s, fake nude images of celebrities proliferated on Usenet and other websites, leading to campaigns to take legal action against the creators of the images and websites dedicated to determining the veracity of nude photos. Magazines such as Celebrity Skin, which published paparazzi shots and illicitly obtained nude photos, have been cited as precursors to this phenomenon. ![]() Many websites host fake nude and pornographic photos of celebrities, which are sometimes referred to as celebrity fakes. Fakes can be created using image editing software or through machine learning (fake pornographic images created this way are referred to as deepfakes). Several reasons for the creation of these doctored photographs include sexual gratification, stigmatization or embarrassment of the subject, or for commercial gain, such as by selling the photographs on pornography websites. Fake nude photography refers to nude photographs created to appear as actual nudes of an individual.
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