Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 10
X Suspends Account After 12 Deepfake Posts Targeted Chinese Activist Apple Peiqing Ni
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 10

X Suspends Account After 12 Deepfake Posts Targeted Chinese Activist Apple Peiqing Ni

1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 10

Summary

  • Hours after a Guardian inquiry, X suspended an account that had posted 12 deepfake images and videos falsely depicting UK-based Chinese activist Apple Peiqing Ni as a drug user and sexually promiscuous.
  • X had earlier rejected Ni’s reports, with automated systems and follow-up support responses saying the tagged posts did not violate harassment or violent-speech rules despite policies against malicious targeting meant to humiliate or degrade users.
  • Ni, 27, said the abuse began after she publicized a June 4 Tiananmen massacre commemoration in south London; one post also falsely celebrated her being beaten, apparently echoing a March attack on another activist at her Trafalgar Square sit-in.
  • The case adds to scrutiny of X’s moderation systems in the UK, where Ofcom last month announced a deal with the platform to review suspected illegal hate and terror content within 24 hours.

Insights

New laws were meant to stop deepfakes. Why are platforms still letting authoritarian regimes attack activists?
If X’s own AI generates deepfakes, is its failure to stop state-sponsored harassment intentional?