According to Jameela Jamil, the individuals who created the deepfake nudities are “deeply cringe” and she refuses to make the encounter “into a thing I fear”

According to Jameela Jamil, the individuals who created the deepfake nudities are “deeply cringe” and she refuses to make the encounter “into a thing I fear”

According to Jameela Jamil, she is unwilling to make her experience of being the subject of deepfake pornography “into a thing that I fear.”

The 38-year-old actress learned last year that artificial intelligence had been used to create phony pornographic movies of her face on another person’s body.

The Good Place actress, however, feels that’s what the men who created them wanted, therefore she won’t allow the pictures to break her.While working on a documentary about the topic, a TV channel reached out to Jameela and informed her that she had been deepfaked.

“It [the video] is fake,” she remarked in an interview with Glamour UK. And I find it really offensive that men would do this. They want it to become something I fear, but I refuse to do that. The folks who are creating these films are profiting from our distress.The fact that they are filming my face in their basement and using it on someone else’s t**s and vagina makes me very unhappy.

There are many things you could do with your one life, but they chose to sit in the dark and do this instead. I’m not ashamed of that. They are to blame.

Jameela stated that she thinks “the way we are handling boys and men” in society is not working and that something needs to be done to assist those who create deepfake images.

It comes after the celebrity, who won Glamour’s Game Changing Voice Of The Year, declared that her “body is broken forever” by conventional beauty standards.Jameela recalled how it was a thrilling time for women in terms of body acceptance and that she last received an award at the presentation in 2013 when she was voted Radio Personality of the Year.

However, she offered a passionate speech about how women are once again “suffering and risking our lives” in the chase of the “same Snapchat face,” expressing her grief at the return of “heroin chic.”

“I beg of you, as I stand here with a body broken forever because of what I put it through for our society’s beauty standards… to not sell your old lady self short,” she added, urging women and girls to be kinder to themselves.

Before expressing her worry that there had been a reversal, Jameela started off by discussing the optimism of the 2010s.

“Boys are encouraged to build their bodies, as well as their futures and legacies,” the Good Place star stated.

“While women and girls are starving, injecting, hurting, and sometimes literally dying—in an attempt to achieve the ever-evolving, erratic beauty standard as quickly as possible.”

The actress questioned, “Why is women’s pain and harm still so hypernormalized?”

Jameela continued by urging all women and girls to make decisions that will benefit them rather than harm them and to resist giving in to misogyny.

“The patriarchy aims to divert, destroy, and erase [women] by the time we get older because we become harder to control,” Jameela stated in her stirring address. Because we become too precious.

“We must avoid learning this, as it could lead us to focus more of our efforts on issues that could level the playing field in this world.

“We might start getting proper sleep,” she continued, grinning. We may consume adequate nutrition.

We risk becoming overly self-satisfied and really assured of our identity. What could we do, do you think?