Anti-deepfake bill advances to Senate floor, creating new rules for AI-generated content The TAKE IT DOWN Act, targeting non-consensual deepfake imagery, was signed into law by President Trump on May 19, 2025, after passing the Senate unanimously and the House with a 409-2 vote. The bill requires platforms to remove non-consensual intimate imagery upon valid takedown notices, with the first conviction occurring in April 2026. The legislation marks one of the fastest-moving AI laws, reflecting bipartisan consensus on regulating AI-generated content. Anti-deepfake bill advances to Senate floor, creating new rules for AI-generated content The TAKE IT DOWN Act passed the Senate unanimously before sailing through the House and becoming law, marking one of the fastest-moving pieces of AI legislation in recent memory Congress found something it could actually agree on: AI-generated fake intimate images are bad. The TAKE IT DOWN Act, a bipartisan bill targeting non-consensual deepfake imagery, passed the Senate by unanimous consent in February 2025, then cleared the House with a 409-2 vote on April 28, 2025. President Trump signed it into law on May 19, 2025. What the bill actually does The full name is the Tools to Address Known Exploitation by Immobilizing Technological Deepfakes on Websites and Networks Act. The legislation, formally designated S. 146, creates a national framework requiring platforms to remove non-consensual intimate imagery, or NCII, after receiving a valid takedown notice. The bill was introduced on January 16, 2025, by Senator Ted Cruz R-TX and Senator Amy Klobuchar D-MN . First Lady Melania Trump also publicly championed the bill. Why this matters beyond the obvious A companion bill, the DEFIANCE Act, advanced through the Senate by unanimous consent in January 2026. That legislation takes a different angle, empowering victims to file civil lawsuits against the creators and distributors of deepfake content. The first conviction under the TAKE IT DOWN Act came in April 2026, involving an individual in Ohio who used AI to create and distribute non-consensual imagery. What this means for crypto investors The bill represents part of a broader regulatory posture toward AI-generated content. Congress took barely four months to go from bill introduction to presidential signature. Compare that to the multi-year slog of crypto-specific legislation like the FIT21 Act or various stablecoin frameworks. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .