Did you know ‘Nudify’ Apps Continue Advertising on Meta’s Platforms Despite Company’s Attempt of Banning Adult Content
Meta seems to have its hands full with a lot of problems after entering 2025.
The
tech giant has clear set guidelines about adult content sharing on its
popular social media apps including Facebook and Instagram. However,
that does not seem to be enough to stop AI-based nudity apps from spreading, as per 404Media.
These
apps use AI technology to produce naked or explicit images. The
shocking part is how they continue to be marketed across Instagram and
Facebook despite Meta’s efforts to crack down on adult content.
The
nudity apps create images of popular celebs and influencers without
consent. Most of them are explicit in nature and seem very real at first
glance. If that’s not all, their ads are doing great on Meta’s apps as
they. Users fall for them and engage with them, allowing them to
flourish and expand. One prominent example is Crush AI.
The nudify app makes it very clear from the start what users can expect from its service. The ads feature real people such as models and celebrities, not to mention famous OnlyFans stars. You can upload any image or simply erase a popular star’s clothing with the service.
Meta is trying its best to crack down on the ads but it seems like its efforts might be in vain. Apps like Crush AI produce fake profile pictures through AI and run new ads through those pages. Interestingly, every ad markets unique domain names which redirect the app when you click on it.
Reports
from Mashable shared more on the matter and how AI apps and deepfakes
keep using the advertising platform to give rise to more traffic and
money from AI-based adult material. The ads go against the company’s
policies and this firm removes them altogether after becoming aware of
certain ads.
Meta, on the other hand, uses another standard for
moderating ads. Content shared by users on Facebook and Instagram gets
detected by Meta automatically and therefore removed as a result.
However, a lot of the content goes unnoticed when published on the
company’s ad platform.