The activist Olympia Coral Pioneer of Laws against Digital Sexual Violence, urged this Wednesday to legislate beyond the manipulation of images with artificial intelligence (AI) to create non -consensual sexual content, before the rise of technologies such as sexual robots.
“I call the call to deputies already deputies that we do not make legislative populism. We do not need to incorporate the word just ‘artificial intelligence’ to think that we already reduce all patches to protect women in digital spaces, ”said Coral during the first Latin American Summit of Digital Defenders.
Coral, promoter of the Olimpia Law to punish digital sexual violence, warned that after AI other technologies will come “which will surely take the bodies of women and girls again.”
For example, he denounced that the company ‘Sex Dolls’, which operates mainly in the United States, currently generates sexual robot, with photographs of any person.
“It’s you, it’s your person, you seem, it’s your identity, but it’s not you and it’s a robot that someone bought for $ 16,000, who reached him to the door of his house,” the activist warned.
He added that among the most popular robots of that company are the “‘Baby Pussy’ or robotized babies to be raped, to be penetrated because there are customers who buy them.”
He also warned of a sexual robot called ‘frigid’, scheduled to reject a sexual relationship, that is, to recreate a violation.
Given these new scenarios, the activist highlighted the need for a regulation against the “patriarchal algorithms”, which violate the bodies of women and girls in the digital field, even more with the incorporation of artificial intelligences.
“Who will regulate them, how they are going to regulate, in what sense we are making a regulatory ethic and with whom we are forming this regulatory ethical network?” He questioned.
He also criticized the lack of questioning about the evolution of digital sexual crimes and the responsibility of technology companies.
Coral recalled the case of Diego ‘N’, a student of the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) accused of manipulating images of his companions with AI, and after the first trial of his kind in Latin America in December, he did not receive a sentence for lack of evidence.
“We could have had the first sentence for violation of sexual intimacy with artificial intelligence in the world (…) we did not have the sentence due to evidence, not for a legislation bias,” he said.
After being a victim and survivor of digital sexual violence in 2013, Coral promoted the Olimpia Law, which bears his name and has established himself in Mexico and in some Latin American countries, such as Panama and Argentina, while in Honduras, Bolivia and Ecuador he is under construction.
Mexico houses the first Latin American Summit of Digital Defenders, which brings together activists and authorities from the region from February 24 to 27 to create a regional model to punish digital sexual violence.
With EFE information
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