An Australian teenager has pleaded guilty to creating deepfake pornography, in a landmark case.
William Hamish Yeates, 19, is the first person to be charged under a new national law which criminalises the manipulation of sexual images and carries a maximum penalty of seven years in prison.
Experts says deepfake pornography - often created through artificial intelligence technology, and overwhelmingly targeting women and girls - is the new frontier of gendered, image-based abuse and school bullying.
Yeates did not comment as he left court after admitting four offences on Wednesday. He will return for a hearing in April.
Yeates was previously facing 20 Commonwealth charges, but the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP) withdraw some of them after he pleaded guilty to creating or altering sexual material without consent and distributing it, as well as using a carriage service in a harassing or offensive way.






