Minnesota passes the nation's first ban on 'nudification' apps

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Minnesota passes first 'nudification' app ban

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Technology

Minnesota passes the nation’s first ban on ‘nudification’ apps

The apps are one of the major ways nonconsensual AI deepfakes can be made without any technical expertise — including by kids.

This bill was the first attempt in the country to ban websites or apps that promote digital undressing, where photographs of fully clothed people can be uploaded and manipulated with generative AI to appear nude.

(The 19th; Getty Images)

Jasmine Mithani

Technology Reporter

Published

2026-04-30 07:39

7:39

April 30, 2026

am

America/Chicago

Updated

2026-05-01 13:49:00.000000

America/Los_Angeles

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The Minnesota Senate on Wednesday passed the country’s first ban on “nudification” apps 65-0, addressing one of the main sources of nonconsensual deepfakes. The bill was passed by the state House last week and now just needs the governor’s signature to become law.

Advocates are optimistic Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, will sign legislation soon.

This bill was the first attempt in the country to ban websites or apps that promote digital undressing, where photographs of fully clothed people can be uploaded and manipulated with generative AI to appear nude.

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These services power nonconsensual intimate imagery and don’t require any technical expertise to use. Google and Apple ban nudification apps from their respective web stores, but research by the Tech Transparency Project showed they remain easily accessible. Investigations from multiple news organizations have found Meta has failed to fully block ads for nudification apps on Facebook and Instagram despite banning them.

This blend means the tools are easy for kids to use; the independent media organization Indicator has tracked 23 cases of deepfake abuse targeting school communities in the United States since 2023.

Federal attempts to create a civil right of action for survivors of nonconsensual deepfakes have stalled in Congress. The DEFIANCE Act has yet to make it to the House floor, though it has been passed by the Senate twice. Last year’s Take It Down Act made it a federal crime to disseminate nonconsensual intimate images, regardless of provenance, but does not allow survivors to sue for damages.

Minnesota House File 1606 would allow survivors to sue the owners of nudification apps for damages and empower the state attorney general to collect fines of $500,000 per violation. Other states like California have taken steps to hold the people behind companies...

email apps verifying nudification first story

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