Request a deepfake case review.
Tell us what happened. If you or your child was the subject of non-consensual AI-generated intimate images, a case review may help clarify whether the situation fits a developing legal category, including claims connected to the TAKE IT DOWN Act, privacy and likeness law, and the pending litigation over AI image tools. Your submission may be reviewed by participating legal professionals, legal advertisers, or intake partners where available.
Lawsuit Center is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Submitting information does not guarantee eligibility, compensation, contact, or representation. AI liability is a developing area of law, and outcomes in pending cases are unpredictable.
Situations people often research.
Non-consensual AI-generated intimate images, often called deepfakes, are the subject of a fast-growing body of law: the federal TAKE IT DOWN Act, state intimate-image and likeness statutes, and pending lawsuits against AI image tools and the platforms where images spread. People who research a case review through this page often include:
- Adults who were the subject of non-consensual sexual or intimate images generated by an AI tool
- Parents or guardians of a minor who was the subject of non-consensual AI-generated images
- People whose images were publicly spread and who had difficulty getting them removed, including after a platform missed the 48-hour removal window
- People threatened with the creation or release of such images, including in extortion or sextortion attempts
- People who experienced documented harm as a result, such as lost work, professional consequences, harassment, or emotional distress
- Family members researching a claim on behalf of someone who cannot research it themselves
Deepfake case review form.
Start with the category that best fits, then briefly describe what happened. Contact information is requested so someone can follow up if your submission appears to match an available review path.
What happens next.
Your information may be reviewed to understand whether it relates to a category of AI lawsuit that has been filed, an emerging claim pattern, a sponsored case-review path, or possible law firm follow-up.
If there appears to be a possible fit, a participating law firm, legal advertiser, intake provider, or other partner may contact you to ask for more information.
No attorney-client relationship is formed unless and until you sign an agreement directly with a law firm.
The deepfake litigation landscape.
Legal pressure over non-consensual AI-generated images is building on several fronts. The federal TAKE IT DOWN Act criminalizes publishing non-consensual intimate images, including AI-generated ones, and requires covered platforms to remove reported images within 48 hours. Private lawsuits against xAI over images generated by Grok include individual claims and proposed class actions, pleaded under privacy, likeness, and platform-responsibility theories. State attorneys general, a bipartisan 35-state coalition, and the City of Baltimore have also acted.
Most of these cases are at an early stage, and few have been resolved on the merits. Key contested issues include whether an AI image tool is a creator or an intermediary, how platform-liability frameworks apply when the tool itself generates the material, and how the TAKE IT DOWN Act's removal duty is enforced. The answers will shape what is and is not a viable claim.
For background on the specific cases and the legal questions they raise, the educational articles at Lawsuit Informer provide attorney-led commentary written for non-lawyers.
Read this before submitting.
Lawsuit Center is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Submitting information through this website does not create an attorney-client relationship and does not guarantee that you qualify for a claim, that compensation will be available, or that any attorney or law firm will offer representation.
AI liability is a developing area of law. The legal theories being advanced in the pending cases have not yet been resolved by appellate courts. Outcomes are unpredictable, and a viable-looking case under current pleadings may not survive a motion to dismiss or a later substantive ruling.
Some pages may include attorney advertising, sponsored listings, paid law firm visibility, or referral-related opportunities. Sponsored visibility is advertising and should not be treated as a recommendation or endorsement of any attorney or law firm.
Legal deadlines for these claims can vary by state and can be short. If you believe you may have a claim, consider speaking with a licensed attorney as soon as possible.