Advanced International Journal for Research

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Deepfakes, Free Speech, and the Right to Truth: A Comparative Legal Study on Regulating Synthetic Media in the USA, UK, and India.

Author(s) Mr. DEVESH KUMAR
Country India
Abstract The rapid development of artificial intelligence has sparked the emergence of deepfakes, hyper-realistic synthetic media created using deep learning algorithms that can convincingly imitate human appearance and voice. While these tools offer creative and innovative possibilities, they also raise unprecedented legal, ethical, and social challenges. Deepfakes have been exploited for various malicious purposes, including non-consensual pornography, identity theft, political misinformation, financial fraud, and undermining public trust in media and democratic institutions. This paper provides a comparative legal analysis of how three major countries, the United States, the United Kingdom, and India, are addressing the regulatory challenges posed by deepfake technology. In the U.S., a fragmented legal system exists, with some federal legislation such as the No Fakes Act and the Defiance Act, along with diverse state laws targeting electoral manipulation and sexual privacy. The UK’s Online Safety Act 2023 is a significant step forward, criminalising the distribution of non-consensual explicit deepfake content. However, broader misuse remains covered by traditional laws like defamation, data protection, and harassment statutes. India, without a specific deepfake legislation, depends on provisions within the Information Technology Act, 2000, and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, which inadequately address the complex threats posed by synthetic media.
The paper further explores the central normative tension between the right to freedom of expression and the right to truth and protection from harm. It critically evaluates whether existing free speech doctrines are equipped to handle the unique challenges of synthetic falsification, concluding that while deepfakes pose novel technological risks, they do not create fundamentally new constitutional dilemmas. Rather, the regulation of deepfakes requires a strong extension of existing legal doctrines, with appropriate safeguards for satire, parody, and artistic freedom. Finally, the paper emphasises the growing threat that deepfakes pose to democratic discourse, particularly through their capacity to degrade informational trust, fuel the Liar’s dividend and destabilise the evidentiary value of digital content. It calls for the development of harmonised legal standards, AI detection mechanisms, and ethical guidelines to safeguard individual dignity, ensure media authenticity, and strengthen democratic resilience in the digital age.
Keywords Deepfakes, synthetic media, artificial intelligence, misinformation, digital disinformation, freedom of expression, right to truth, cyber law, non-consensual content, democratic integrity, media trust, USA, UK, India, Online Safety Act 2023, Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023, legal regulation, AI ethics, digital privacy, platform accountability.
Published In Volume 6, Issue 4, July-August 2025
Published On 2025-08-31
DOI https://doi.org/10.63363/aijfr.2025.v06i04.1117
Short DOI https://doi.org/g92pmp

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