‘Terrifying': Moment MP showed deepfake nude pic of herself in parliament
A politician has described the moment she held up a doctored nude image of herself in New Zealand parliament as 'terrifying' despite knowing it wasn't real.
Laura McClure has gained global attention for the brave and shocking act last month where she aimed to draw attention to the danger of AI-generated deepfake pornography.
Holding up a fake nude of herself, Ms McClure told parliament that it took her less than five minutes to make the image online following a quick Google search.
Ms McClure reflected on the moment as 'absolutely terrifying' when appearing on Sky News on Tuesday.
She knew it wasn't real but the image looked so much like her.
'I felt like it needed to be done, it needed to be shown how important this is and how easy it is to do, and also how much it can look like yourself,' she said.
Ms McClure wants to amend current legislation that makes it illegal to share nude photographs without consent to include deepfakes.
'I believe they are just as harmful, if not more, than the real thing because people can put you into all kinds of depraved videos, for example,' she said.
She says the problem isn't the technology, but rather its misuse.
Targeting the technology 'would be a little bit like Whac-A-Mole,' she said.
'You'd take one site down and another one would pop up.'
The issue of deepfakes is particularly a concern among young people.
'Here in New Zealand a 13-year-old, a young 13-year-old, just a baby, attempted suicide on school grounds after she was deepfaked, so it's not just a bit of fun. It's not a joke. It's actually really harmful,' Ms McClure said.
'Diabolically bad': Deepfakes in Australian schools
In February an investigation was launched into the online circulation of 'vulgar' AI-generated pictures of female students at Melbourne's Gladstone Park Secondary College.
At the time, it was thought up to 60 students could be affected.
A 16-year-old was quickly arrested and interviewed by detectives but released without charge.
news.com.au can reveal no further arrests have been made in the months since and the investigation remains open.
Last year, AI-generated nude images featuring the faces of at least 50 female students in years 9 to 12 from Bacchus Marsh Grammar were circulated online. A 17-year-old boy was cautioned by police and the investigation was closed.
The Victorian Department of Education states schools are expected to report incidents to police if their students are involved.
Cybersafety expert and former police officer Susan McLean spoke to news.com.au about the issue earlier this year.
Ms McLean said creating sexually explicit, AI-generated images is now as easy as uploading a clothed photo of someone and choosing a pose for an app to then spit out a pornographic image, and it will only become more of a problem.
Sending real or fake nude images of people under the age of 18 is a crime in Australia, but the harsh reality is, 'there is nothing any person can do to protect themselves from this,' Ms McLean told news.com.au.
'You have to hope that someone doesn't choose you to become a victim; you have to hope that the offender doesn't offend,' she said.
She agrees the focus should not be on trying to fight the apps that create the content.
Instead, she believes in educating young men on respectful and lawful behaviour. That includes being included in comprehensive cybersafety education delivered by experts in schools and parents taking responsibility to instil it into their children at home.
'You have a responsibility to keep your children safe and you have a responsibility to ensure your child is not inflicting harm on someone else,' Ms McLean said.
She says demonising technology and artificial intelligence is not the answer as there are benefits, but 'in the wrong hands it's diabolically bad'.
'The harm to the victims of this crime type is ongoing, it continues, even if the images have been removed, people know they've been caught up in it,' Ms McLean said. 'They will go over this in their mind time and time again.'
This particular crime type predominantly affecting female students and teachers can be quite gendered, she said, and it shows 'the extensive lack of respect that females have to put up with in society'.
'Victims of this crime need a lot of support and consistent and ongoing support. And it is never their fault whatsoever,' Ms McLean said.
'We've got to do something to change the mindset of young men who believe this is a good idea to do.'
It is not just parents and schools, Ms McLean said all sections of society had a role to play, such as sports clubs calling out inappropriate remarks about women and girls in the locker room.
NRL women targeted by disturbing deepfakes
Last week, NRL presenter Tiffany Salmond revealed she had been targeted by a deepfake AI attack, with a recent bikini snap doctored into a fake video of her performing explicit acts and uploaded to social media.
Salmond said it was both 'surreal' and 'shocking'.
'Felt important to speak up on this. Glad it's opening up a wider conversation,' she said in a video uploaded to Instagram over the weekend.
'I'll be honest, it was shocking. Having the public profile that I do, especially as a woman working in a male-dominated sport, I'm no stranger to having my looks discussed or being the subject of sometimes perverse conversations.
'But this was the first time it went beyond just chatter.
'To actually see photos of myself – ones I had posted confidently on social media – turned into videos where I'm moving and doing explicit actions, was surreal.
'If deepfakes were purely about attraction, we would see women making them about men, but we don't – and it's because in those dynamics, that power imbalance doesn't exist.
'We live in a society where men can't get enough of women's bodies, but it's only when they get a sneaky view that they weren't meant to see.'
victim of a deepfake AI attack.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Leading educational and developmental psychologist Clare Rowe reveals how schools are causing climate anxiety in kids as young as five
A leading psychologist has revealed how schools have become a major driver of rising rates of anxiety in kids, telling Sky News Australia kids as young as five are being left terrified. A new report by educational and developmental psychologist Clare Rowe claims alarmist content in Australia's National Curriculum is causing an 'epidemic of climate anxiety', with primary-school-aged kids being bombarded with 'emotive' messages about climate change that are not developmentally appropriate. Ms Rowe said mental health experts like her were seeing increasing numbers of children 'gripped by fear' about climate change. 'I have had seven, eight, and nine-year-olds in tears in my office because they do not think they're going to make it to adulthood. They think the older generations have failed them, the government's not listening, and no one cares about them,' she said. The leading psychologist told Sky News host Chris Kenny that while much of the research that exists assumed this was because they are exposed to more extreme weather events, her analysis showed it was due to the lessons about climate change that saturate the curriculum. 'We went and looked at the curriculum in detail. And the fact is, sustainability - aka climate - is what they call a cross-curriculum priority. It's got to be embedded in every single subject from five years old,' Ms Rowe said. 'So in music, they're writing rap songs about climate. In English, they're writing poetry about climate change. It's mandated, so teachers have to teach it across the curriculum. The developmental psychologist said much of the content was very 'emotive', with messages such as 'there is no planet B' and 'the earth is sick'. 'It is no wonder we're spending billions of dollars on mental health that these kids - we're not actually educating them, we're just terrifying them,' she said. Ms Rowe's report argues that it is 'developmentally inappropriate' for primary school-aged kids to be learning about complex issues like climate change. And the leading psychologist said this was resulting in kids coming home and telling their parents they needed to eat less meat and drive their cars less, or else there would be dire consequences. 'The kids I see do believe… that we're in an extinction. And that's just abusive,' she said. Ms Rowe said she was not a scientist and did not take a position on climate change, but that even if the goal was to drive climate change action, the current approach was counterproductive. 'Even if you subscribe to the fact that we're all doomed… we're not actually equipping the next generation to become the brilliant scientists who are going to come up with the adaptations, who are going to solve the problem. Because they're just paralysed,' she said. Ms Rowe argues that in order to reduce the growing prevalence of eco-anxiety, climate change education needs to be delayed until secondary school. But that ideally, the National Curriculum should be rebalanced and sustainability removed as a cross curriculum priority.

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Douglas Murray rips into Bono's ‘rotten' claims about USAID
Author Douglas Murray claims Bono is 'generous with other people's money' after he shared his advocacy for USAID. 'The judgment of Elon Musk, the DOGE team and indeed President Trump, was that they looked under the bonnet of what was there at USAID … and decided that the whole thing was so rotten, and there was so much unaccountability that it just wasn't worth saving, it was worth scrapping,' Mr Murray told Sky News host Rita Panahi. 'When Bono speaks like this, he seems to forget … this is money that American taxpayers work for and hand over to the federal government to be well used. 'USAID's money was not well used; it was an incredible political entity.'

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Megyn Kelly savagely calls out Beyonce for stealing content
'The Megyn Kelly Show' host Megyn Kelly has slammed Beyonce for her 'tissue paper-thin skin'. Ms Kelly told Sky News host Paul Murray that Beyonce continues to receive 'glowing coverage' from the media, alongside her husband Jay-Z. 'If you write something bad about them and certainly people in the music industry who need ongoing access, have to all hail and bend the knee at the alter of these two.'