‘Think
before sharing,’ Giorgia Meloni says as AI-made lingerie image of her goes
viral
Italian
prime minister had received wave of criticism from people who believed deepfake
pictures of her were real
Lorenzo
Tondo in Palermo
Tue 5 May
2026 17.53 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/05/giorgia-meloni-ai-generated-lingerie-image-deepfake
Italy’s
prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has criticised the circulation of AI-generated
deepfake images of her, including one depicting her in lingerie, after they
were widely shared online.
Meloni
wrote on Facebook on Tuesday: “In recent days, several fake images of me have
been circulating, generated using artificial intelligence and passed off as
real by some overzealous opponents.
“I must
admit that whoever created them … even improved my appearance quite a bit,” she
joked. “But the fact remains that, in order to attack and spread falsehoods,
people are now willing to use absolutely anything.”
In her
post, Meloni shared an AI-generated image showing her apparently dressed in
lingerie, seated on a bed – a fabrication that had gone viral and prompted a
wave of condemnation from users who believed it to be genuine.
One user
wrote: “That a prime minister should present herself in such a state is truly
shameful. Unworthy of the institutional role she holds. She has no sense of
shame.”
In her
statement, Meloni denounced what she described as a form of cyberbullying,
warning that AI-generated images were an increasingly dangerous tool capable of
misleading and harming individuals.
“The
issue goes beyond me,” she added. “Deepfakes are a dangerous tool, because they
can deceive, manipulate and target anyone. I can defend myself. Many others
cannot. For this reason, one rule should always apply: verify before believing,
and think before sharing. Because today it happens to me, tomorrow it could
happen to anyone.”
The fight
against the risks posed by AI and deepfakes has become a central plank of the
agenda of Meloni’s far-right government.
Last
September, Italy became the first EU country to approve a comprehensive law
regulating the use of AI, introducing prison terms for those who deploy the
technology to cause harm — including the creation of deepfakes — and placing
limits on children’s access.
Meloni’s
government said the legislation, aligned with the bloc’s landmark EU AI Act,
marked a decisive step in shaping how artificial intelligence was developed and
used across the country.
The law
followed a scandal over a pornographic website that published doctored images
of prominent Italian women, including Meloni and the opposition leader Elly
Schlein, which triggered outrage in Italy.
The
images – lifted from social media or public appearances and altered with
vulgar, sexist captions – were shared on a platform with more than 700,000
subscribers. Many showed female politicians across party lines, manipulated to
emphasise body parts or imply sexualised poses.
The
Italian police ordered the site to be shut down, while prosecutors in Rome
opened an investigation over alleged offences including the unlawful
dissemination of sexually explicit images (so-called revenge porn), defamation
and extortion.

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