Global Privacy Authorities Joint Statement on AI-Generated Imagery
Summary
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (PCPD) and 60 other global privacy authorities have issued a joint statement expressing concern over AI-generated imagery and its potential for harm. The statement urges organizations to develop and use AI content generation systems lawfully, with specific measures to protect data subjects, particularly children.
What changed
Sixty global privacy and data protection authorities, coordinated by the Global Privacy Assembly, have issued a joint statement addressing concerns about AI-generated imagery, particularly non-consensual intimate imagery and harmful content depicting identifiable individuals. The statement highlights risks to fundamental rights, especially for children and vulnerable groups, and calls for lawful development and use of AI content generation systems.
Organizations developing or using AI content generation systems are reminded to implement robust safeguards against misuse of personal information and the generation of harmful content, ensure transparency about system capabilities and uses, provide mechanisms for content removal requests, and address specific risks to children. While non-binding, the statement signals a coordinated international focus on regulating AI-generated imagery and protecting privacy rights, requiring compliance with applicable data protection and privacy laws.
What to do next
- Review AI content generation systems for compliance with data protection and privacy laws.
- Implement safeguards to prevent misuse of personal information and generation of non-consensual intimate imagery, especially concerning children.
- Ensure transparency regarding AI system capabilities, safeguards, and acceptable uses.
Source document (simplified)
Media Statements
AI-Generated Harmful Imagery Raises Concerns Worldwide PCPD, together with 60 Privacy Protection Authorities, Issue a Global Joint Statement
Date: 23 February 2026
AI-Generated Harmful Imagery Raises Concerns Worldwide
PCPD, together with 60 Privacy Protection Authorities,
Issue a Global Joint Statement
The Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (PCPD), together with 60 privacy or data protection authorities around the world, today issued the “Joint Statement on AI-Generated Imagery and the Protection of Privacy” (Joint Statement). The signatories include privacy or data protection authorities from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Korea, New Zealand, Singapore and the United Kingdom. While expressing their concern about artificial intelligence (AI) systems that generate realistic images and videos depicting identifiable individuals without their knowledge and consent and other harmful content featuring real individuals, the co-signatories remind all organisations to develop and use AI content generation systems lawfully and to adopt a series of measures to protect the fundamental rights of data subjects, in particular children and vulnerable groups .
The Joint Statement was initiated and coordinated through the Global Privacy Assembly’s International Enforcement Cooperation Working Group. The Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data, Ms Ada CHUNG Lai-ling, said, “The use of AI systems to generate indecent or malicious photos and videos of individuals, especially children, has recently raised concerns of regulatory authorities in Hong Kong and other areas worldwide. As the co-chair of the Global Privacy Assembly (GPA)’s International Enforcement Cooperation Working Group (IEWG), the PCPD has joined hands with its international counterparts to set out fundamental international principles to guide organisations in developing and using AI content generation systems lawfully and safely. The Joint Statement also reminds all organisations that develop and use AI systems to generate contents to comply with applicable data protection and privacy laws.”
The co-signatories remind all organisations to develop and use AI content generation systems lawfully and to adopt a series of measures to protect the fundamental rights of data subjects, in particular children and vulnerable groups , including :
- Implement robust safeguards to prevent the misuse of personal information and generation of non-consensual intimate imagery and other harmful materials, particularly where children are depicted;
- Ensure meaningful transparency about AI system capabilities, safeguards, acceptable uses and the consequences of misuse;
- Provide effective and accessible mechanisms for individuals to request the removal of harmful content involving personal information and respond rapidly to such requests; and
- Address specific risks to children through implementing enhanced safeguards and providing clear, age-appropriate information to children, parents, guardians and educators.
The Joint Statement can be downloaded here.
Background
The GPA is the premier international forum for privacy or data protection authorities worldwide. The IEWG, a working group under the GPA, promotes cross-jurisdictional cooperation among privacy or data protection authorities and drives cross-jurisdictional enforcement collaboration. The PCPD is the co-chair of the IEWG.
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