Paris Hilton debuts deepfake investigation ‘Mr. Deepfakes’ on TikTok with Laurie Segall

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Paris Hilton has launched a 14-part investigative documentary series titled “Searching for Mr. Deepfakes” exclusively on TikTok, produced in partnership with award-winning journalist Laurie Segall. The series, which dropped on May 27, 2026, combines true-crime investigation with digital safety education, tracking the hunt for the anonymous operator behind one of the internet’s most dangerous explicit deepfake platforms. This groundbreaking project marks a critical moment in celebrity activism against AI-generated sexual abuse.

🔥 Quick Facts

  • 14-part investigative series launched May 27, 2026, exclusively on TikTok
  • Over 100,000 explicit deepfake images of Paris Hilton circulating without consent
  • 93% of explicit deepfakes online target women, per February 2026 research
  • DEFIANCE Act passed Senate unanimously in January 2026, allowing deepfake victims to sue creators
  • Produced by 11:11 Media (Paris Hilton’s production company) and Mostly Human Media

The Digital Crisis Behind the Investigation

Paris Hilton revealed in January 2026 testimony before Congress that over 100,000 nonconsensual sexually explicit deepfake images of her had been created using AI technology. This staggering number reflects a broader crisis: according to research cited in the series, nearly 93% of all explicit deepfakes target women, with the volume of such content surging by approximately 900% in recent years. The deepfake industry has become institutionalized, with dedicated websites hosting thousands of non-consensual intimate images daily.

The timing of this series is significant. Explicit deepfakes now represent 98% of all deepfake videos online, per Security Hero research from April 2026. What distinguishes this crisis is its weaponization: deepfakes have become tools of harassment, extortion, and reputational destruction. Fraud attempts using deepfakes increased by 2,137% over three years, according to Signicat data, making this not just a privacy violation but an economic threat.

Inside the Investigation: Laurie Segall’s Reporting

Laurie Segall, the award-winning journalist behind the series, is no stranger to tech accountability. The former CNN journalist has spent her career investigating technology’s impact on society. Her partnership with Paris Hilton brings both journalistic rigor and survivor perspective to the investigation. This hybrid approach—combining documentary investigation with personal testimony—transforms what could be a purely technical exposé into an intimate exploration of digital harm.

The series employs true-crime documentary techniques to track the operator(s) behind the deepfake platform, interviewing survivors, experts, and digital investigators. Early episodes generated 640,000 to 690,000 views on individual TikTok videos within days of launch. The investigation uncovers the infrastructure enabling explicit deepfake creation and distribution, exploring how platforms profit from non-consensual content and what law enforcement responses exist.

Deepfake Impact Data and Global Response

The documented impact of explicit deepfakes extends beyond individual victims to societal damage. Research presented in the series highlights key statistics:

Metric Finding
Explicitness Rate 98% of deepfakes are sexually explicit
Gender Targeting 93% of explicit deepfakes target women
Volume Growth 900% increase in explicit deepfake content (2023-2026)
Fraud Impact 2,137% increase in deepfake fraud attempts (3-year period)
Biometric Fraud Deepfakes now account for 40% of all biometric fraud
Paris Hilton’s Explicit Images Over 100,000 nonconsensual images in circulation

The DEFIANCE Act (Deepfakes Enforcement as Deterrent to Online Sexual Abuse Act), which passed the Senate unanimously and received bipartisan House endorsement, directly addresses this crisis. The legislation empowers victims to pursue civil claims against deepfake creators, a critical development for survivors who previously had limited legal recourse.

Broader Implications for Digital Rights and Platform Accountability

This series represents more than entertainment; it functions as a digital safety manifesto. By platforming survivor stories alongside investigation footage, Hilton and Segall demonstrate that deepfake abuse is fundamentally a human rights issue, not merely a technical problem. The series challenges the narrative that these platforms are inevitable features of internet culture.

11:11 Media’s commitment to supporting deepfake survivors reflects a broader shift among high-profile figures toward accountability storytelling. The investigation examines how artificial intelligence tools, originally designed for entertainment and visual effects, have been weaponized for sexual violence. The series also explores the economics: who profits from deepfake platforms, how anonymity enables perpetrators, and what multinational platforms ignore about their hosted content.

What This Investigation Means for the Future of AI Accountability

Unlike previous celebrity responses to digital harassment, this documentary positions the deepfake crisis within systemic and legislative contexts. The series aired just months after congressional testimony from Paris Hilton and others, creating a direct feedback loop between activism and education. Viewers watching on TikTok—the exact platform that enables rapid deepfake dissemination—receive both awareness and information about legal protections and reporting mechanisms.

The investigation’s release on May 27, 2026 coincides with heightened global focus on AI regulation. UNESCO, UNICEF, and the European Parliament have all issued reports on deepfake harm to women and girls in 2026. This series contributes evidence-based storytelling to policy discussions that will shape the next generation of platform governance and AI safeguards.

“This series means so much to me. It follows the search for one of the most dangerous and prolific deepfake offenders on the internet. This is part true-crime investigation, part digital safety wake-up call.”

Paris Hilton, Executive Producer and Survivor, via LinkedIn statement (May 28, 2026)

How Can Viewers Engage With This Story?

The series invites active participation from viewers. Each episode includes information about recognizing deepfakes, understanding consent in AI, and resources for survivors. The TikTok format enables shorter, shareable narrative segments, increasing reach beyond traditional documentary audiences. Educational platforms, law enforcement agencies, and women’s safety organizations have already begun directing users to specific episodes for training and awareness purposes.

Sources

  • Adweek — Paris Hilton’s 11:11 Media deepfake documentary coverage (May 27, 2026)
  • TubeFilter — Explicit deepfakes investigation and series production details (May 27, 2026)
  • 19th News — Paris Hilton DEFIANCE Act testimony and deepfake statistics (January 22, 2026)
  • Security Hero Research — 98% explicit deepfake statistic and gender impact data (April 2026)
  • Economic Times / Global Voices — 93% women targeting rate in deepfake content (March-April 2026)
  • Problem Solvers Caucus — DEFIANCE Act unanimous Senate passage documentation (January-March 2026)

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