In a rare moment of overwhelming bipartisan unity, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 409–2 to pass the Take It Down Act—landmark federal legislation aimed squarely at the scourge of nonconsensual, AI-generated sexually explicit imagery. The bill, which passed the Senate earlier this year, now awaits President Trump’s signature—a move he has enthusiastically endorsed.
This first-of-its-kind federal statute directly targets the modern epidemic of deepfake pornography, filling longstanding gaps in existing “revenge porn” laws by criminalizing not just the sharing but also the creation of synthetic sexual content depicting real, identifiable individuals—without their consent.
Conclusion: A Defining Moment for Digital Rights
The Take It Down Act is more than a legal milestone—it’s a cultural line in the sand. By outlawing the weaponization of AI to fabricate sexual content without consent, the U.S. is declaring that dignity, privacy, and bodily autonomy remain inviolable—even in a synthetic age.
As President Trump prepares to sign the bill into law, survivors, lawmakers, and advocates alike will watch closely to ensure it delivers not only justice, but hope—that the digital future can still serve human rights, not undermine them.
“This is just the beginning,” said Rep. Salazar. “Because no woman, no child, no person should have to live in fear of a lie crafted by a machine.”