In a stunning break from paralysis and performative outrage, Congress finally treated digital harm like real harm. The Take It Down Act doesn’t erase what’s already been done to victims of deepfake porn, but it does something they’ve rarely been granted: it believes them. A 72-hour removal mandate says their humiliation is not content; it is evidence of an injury the law now recognizes.
The right to sue shifts the balance of power. Platforms that once hid behind “we’re just hosting” now face real consequences for indifference. That bipartisan backing, including from a president famous for weaponizing the internet, signals a cultural turn: consent is not negotiable, even in the age of AI. This won’t stop every violation, and it won’t restore every stolen image or sleepless night. But for the first time, the system isn’t just watching the damage—it’s officially on record calling it wrong.