This should be easy to figure out. Apparently it is not.
For teen girls victimized by ‘deepfake’ nude photos, there are few, if any, pathways to recourse in most states
… Since the 2023 school year kicked into session, cases involving teen girls victimized by the fake nude photos, also known as deepfakes, have proliferated worldwide, including at high schools in New Jersey and Washington state.
Local police departments are investigating the incidents, lawmakers are racing to enact new measures that would enforce punishments against the photos’ creators, and affected families are pushing for answers and solutions.
… Apps that purport to “undress” clothed photos have also been identified as possible tools used in some cases and have been found available for free on app stores. These modern deepfakes can be more realistic-looking and harder to immediately identify as fake.
… New Jersey State Sen. Jon Bramnick said law enforcement expressed concerns to him that the incident would only rise to a “cyber-type harassment claim, even though it really should reach the level of a more serious crime.”
“If you attach a nude body to a child’s face, that to me is child pornography,” he said.
Tools & Techniques. Anything you can learn should help.
https://www.databreaches.net/how-to-calculate-the-cost-of-a-data-breach/
How to Calculate the Cost of a Data Breach
Matt Kelly, CEO of RadicalCompliance.com notes that knowing statistics about the average cost of a data breach isn’t really much help to organizations. Organizations need to know know how to calculate the potential costs at their own organization, he writes, adding, “Only then — when you have a solid sense of how a breach might affect your business — can you develop sensible, risk-based compliance measures to push those costs down.”
So how should an organization go about estimating those costs? , it’s complicated, but Kelly breaks things down into groups of costs and how to begin to estimate them.
Read more at Hyperproof.io.
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