Trends · Critical urgency

AI 'Nudify' / Undressing Apps

A flood of cheap AI apps and Telegram bots will take a clothed photo and generate a realistic naked version of the person in it. Classmates use them on classmates. The image is fake; the harm is real, and federal law is finally catching up.

A pixelated nude silhouette overlaid on a school yearbook photo
If your teen is in crisis, get help now

NCMEC Take It Down (takeitdown.ncmec.org) · NCMEC CyberTipline 1-800-843-5678 · FBI ic3.gov · 988 Crisis Lifeline · Local police.

Most affects
10–1213–1516–18
Teen profile
Body Image Sensitive
Family context
Low Digital SupervisionLimited Tech Literacy
Risk type
AI RiskExploitationMental Health
I.
What it is

The short version.

Cheap consumer apps (often labeled 'nudify,' 'undress,' or 'deepnude') ingest a clothed photo of a person and use diffusion models to generate a fake naked image of the same person. They are advertised openly on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube and run for a few dollars per image. Telegram bots offer the same with a chat command.

II.
Where it shows up

The platforms and contexts.

App stores (some kept up, others taken down and replaced), Telegram, low-tier web ad networks, school-bus-rumor word-of-mouth. The first wave of school-incident reporting (Westfield, NJ 2023; Bay Area schools 2024; Seattle 2024) showed the images circulating in school Snapchat groups within hours of creation.

III.
How long it's been around

The timeline.

Quality jumped in early 2023 with open-source diffusion models. By the 2023–24 school year, U.S. school incidents were being reported weekly. The federal TAKE IT DOWN Act was signed in 2025 making nonconsensual AI-generated intimate imagery a federal crime; states have moved with their own laws.

IV.
What to know

The core facts a parent needs.

  • Victims are overwhelmingly girls 12–16. Perpetrators are usually male classmates who don't fully grasp that they've committed a federal crime.
  • The image is fake; the psychological harm to the victim is comparable to real image abuse. Same shame, same isolation, same risk of self-harm.
  • School responses range from excellent to actively harmful. Some districts treat it as a serious crime requiring police; others treat it as a 'photoshop prank.' Lean on the federal TAKE IT DOWN framework when escalating.
V.
The dangers

What's actually at stake.

  • Severe depression and suicide risk in victims — multiple documented attempts among 2023–24 cases.
  • Federal and state criminal exposure for the perpetrator — a 14-year-old can now be charged for creating or distributing.
  • Image persistence — even after Take It Down's hash-based removal kicks in, copies on Telegram and personal devices are out of reach.
VI.
Practice · 60-second talk

The talk that lands — try it now.

Imagine you just learned your teen brushed up against this. You have 60 seconds before the conversation begins. What you say first decides whether the next 20 minutes opens the door — or slams it.

The version that closes the door

"What were you thinking? Give me your phone — now."

Panic + punishment in the same breath. The teen reads it as "every honest detail will be used against me." The phone comes; the truth doesn't.

What would you open with instead? Picture it for a beat — then…

VII.
All steps in one list

Concrete next steps.

  • If your kid is the victim: lead with 'this is not your fault, you didn't do anything wrong, we will get this taken down.' Then file with NCMEC's Take It Down service (takeitdown.ncmec.org), report to school admin in writing, and consider a police report.
  • If your kid is the perpetrator: this is a federal crime now. Treat it that way — therapist familiar with adolescent sexual misconduct, attorney consult, and serious restorative conversation. The 'they didn't mean it' framing is what enables repeat behavior.
  • Prevent it: have the conversation early. "AI lets you make a fake naked photo of anyone. That's a federal crime now. Don't do it, don't share it, and tell me if you see it." Repeat at age 11 and again at 14.
If your teen is in crisis

NCMEC Take It Down (takeitdown.ncmec.org) · NCMEC CyberTipline 1-800-843-5678 · FBI ic3.gov · 988 Crisis Lifeline · Local police.

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