• Home
  • Press Release
24 Sep 2025

Try Now

Get 10 FREE credits by signing up on our portal today.

Sign Up

The Intimate Images Protection Act (IIPA)

Author: Carter H | 24 Sep 2025

1. Overview

The Intimate Images Protection Act (IIPA) was enacted in some Canadian provinces, including Alberta and Manitoba. It is to protect victims of illegal sharing of intimate images. The law also covers false or altered intimate images, including deepfakes. These are produced with the view to embarrassing or causing another person to endure.

2. Scope of the Law

The law relates to the production and distribution of private images, real or digitally manipulated (like deep fakes), without the agreement of the subjects. The aim is to safeguard people from online harm, like bullying, revenge pornography, and online impersonation of a person. It covers the generator of the image as much as it covers the sharer. There are no exceptions for satire or journalism if harm is caused.

3. Salient Provisions

Unacceptable Behavior: “An individual shall not disseminate a person’s private photograph having known that the creator did not agree to the dissemination of their private photograph.” The act also deals with “photographs digitally modified to produce an impression they show nudity or sexual behavior.”

Requirement of Consents: The consent has to be voluntary, knowledgeable, and specific to any private photograph disseminated.

Platform Obligations: It can be ordered by the courts that social networking websites and platforms delete the photos and do not allow them to be uploaded a second time.

4. Fines & Enforcement

The authorities can be compelled to pay damages for the injury, stop posting the photo, and delete the material. Victims can seek help from the provincial court or human rights organizations. This legislation can also help with criminal harassment or voyeurism claims.

5. Notable Cases

In Alberta, the courts have used the law to require that nude photos that are manipulated and used to harass or intimidate women be deleted. These cases attest to the fact that the law does work, even in cases that involve digitally altered photos.

6. Comparison with International Standards

This law is stronger than the majority of American laws since it attacks deepfakes squarely. It offers victims a simple way of seeking help, even before a full trial is held.

7. Realistic Implications

Vulnerable people can ask the court to delete intimate photos, authentic and fake alike, quickly. Producers and sites should desist from releasing personal photos in the absence of express consent.

8. Future Outlook

Other provinces will likely follow suit with similar laws. New innovations can impose stricter regulations on AI-generated images and accelerate the deletion of material from websites.