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Deepfake privacy: Attitudes and regulation
Matthew B. Kugler
, Carly Pace
Pritzker School of Law
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
9
Scopus citations
Overview
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Arts and Humanities
Tradition
100%
Dissemination
100%
Libel
100%
Harm
100%
Crime
100%
Empirical study
50%
First Amendment
50%
fake
50%
Likeness
50%
Revenge
50%
USA
50%
Technological Change
50%
Political Satire
50%
Keyphrases
Privacy Regulation
100%
Deepfake
100%
Privacy Attitudes
100%
Publicly Available
14%
Law
14%
Adult Population
14%
US Adults
14%
Public Attitudes
14%
Civil Liability
14%
Other-regulation
14%
First Amendment
14%
Written Stories
14%
Image Series
14%
Defamation
14%
Criminal Sanctions
14%
Types of Harm
14%
Illegal Drug Use
14%
Political Satire
14%
Non-consensual
14%
Non-consensual Pornography
14%
Pornographic Videos
14%
Image of a Person
14%
Deepfake Videos
14%
Wrongfulness
14%
Deepfake Technology
14%
Deepfake Generation
14%
Defamation Law
14%
Protection Laws
14%
Criminal Liability
14%
Revenge Pornography
14%
Deepfake Pornography
14%
Social Sciences
Legislation
100%
Crime
66%
Drug Use
33%
Revenge
33%
USA
33%
Technological Change
33%
Political Satire
33%
Computer Science
Deepfakes
100%
Civil Liability
9%
Defamation Law
9%
Representative Sample
9%
Criminal Liability
9%
Psychology
Revenge
100%