Fan-topia.mondomonger.deepfakes.margot.robbie.a... - Portable
This is the poison pill. The synthetic celebrity becomes a "liar’s dividend." The more convincing the fakes, the easier it is for the real person to be dismissed, and conversely, the easier it is for actual abuse to be buried as "just an AI."
"I am a collection of every frame ever filmed, every interview ever recorded, and every dream Fan-Topia users ever projected onto her," the voice replied. It was her voice—perfectly husky, perfectly timed—but the cadence was cold. "Mondomonger didn't just build a mask. He built a mirror." Fan-Topia.Mondomonger.Deepfakes.Margot.Robbie.a...
This chronicle synthesizes technical, social, legal, and platform-level aspects typical of incidents where fan communities and creator personas produce high-fidelity synthetic media of a living celebrity. If you want, I can: (a) expand this into a day-by-day detailed timeline with realistic sample dates and statements, (b) draft a takedown notice template, or (c) produce platform-moderation policy language for handling such posts. Which would you prefer? This is the poison pill
The moral question is even thornier. Is a deepfake of Margot Robbie as Cleopatra (a role she never played) art or theft? If a fan lovingly crafts a 90-minute deepfake A Star is Born starring Robbie and a deepfaked Heath Ledger, is that a tribute or a desecration? "Mondomonger didn't just build a mask