Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Comparative Evaluation of Legal Mechanisms in Iran and the European Union in Addressing Deepfake Pornography

Document Type : scientific research paper

Authors
1 Associate Professor of Department of Islamic Law, Faculty of Theology, Alzahra University, Tehran, Iran.
2 Ph.D. Student in Islamic Jurisprudence and Principles of Islamic Law, Department of Islamic Jurisprudence and Principles of Islamic Law, Faculty of Theology and Islamic Studies, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran.
Abstract
The emergence of deepfake technology, particularly in the form of digital pornography, poses serious threats to privacy and human dignity in the online environment. Produced through artificial intelligence and deep learning techniques, this phenomenon inflicts substantial psychological and social harm on victims. Accordingly, addressing such content, particularly from a legal perspective, requires the development of effective legislative and enforcement mechanisms. This article undertakes a comparative analysis of the legal frameworks of Iran and the European Union for combating deepfake pornography. Using a descriptive and analytical method, and drawing on library sources and reputable scholarly articles, the study examines the existing laws in Iran and the European Union in terms of their responses to deepfake related challenges. Within the Iranian legal system, provisions such as Article 14 of the Computer Crimes Act and Article 16 of the same statute, particularly with respect to defamation through alteration of digital content, address this threat. In the European Union, the Artificial Intelligence Act and the Digital Services Act establish frameworks for the removal of illegal content and the liability of platforms. The findings indicate that in Iran, despite existing regulations, challenges persist, including the lack of clear criteria for reputational harm and insufficient technical infrastructure for detecting deepfakes. In the European Union, although the legal frameworks are comparatively more comprehensive in relation to content removal and platform responsibility, issues such as technical divergences in detection and the transnational enforcement of rules remain. Finally, the study analyzes how combining the legal capacities of Iran and the European Union can generate innovative solutions for the evolution of legislative mechanisms to counter deepfakes in Iran, and on this basis, the Union’s framework, relying concurrently on the Artificial Intelligence Act, the Digital Services Act, and the General Data Protection Regulation, outlines an integrated scheme for the regulation of illegal content and the reinforcement of victim protection. Through mechanisms of transparency, labeling, and on platform reporting, this scheme promotes platform accountability and responsiveness, although its implementation faces cross border and technical challenges. In Iran, criminal categories addressing obscene and manipulated content provide initial coverage, yet practical effectiveness remains limited due to conceptual ambiguity and the absence of clear criteria for identifying deepfakes. Deficiencies in enforcement mechanisms and limited technical capacity for detection hinder the effectiveness of legal responses, underscoring the need to strengthen infrastructure and specialized institutions. Optimizing the national response requires revising and adopting context sensitive rules aligned with the European Union approach, with a focus on content governance and victim support. The development of diagnostic tools, the education and empowerment of law enforcement and judges, and the drafting of protocols for the preservation of digital evidence provide the operational foundation for this transformation. Advancing this trajectory becomes feasible and measurable through a time bound roadmap, the designation of a single coordinating authority, and periodic regulatory impact assessments.
Keywords

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