You probably saw Deepika Padukone’s Diwali pictures this year. Fans were delighted to finally see her daughter, Dua, whose face appeared online for the first time. The family looked warm, happy, and genuinely radiant in the festive photos.
While most fans celebrated the moment, some pages saw it as an opportunity for attention. They used AI tools to create fake versions of Dua’s pictures, claiming they were unseen photos from the same night.
The AI-generated images looked strikingly real. Many viewers couldn’t even tell they were fake. But soon, fans discovered the truth and began calling out the pages for this unethical behaviour.
They reminded everyone that this is exactly why Deepika had kept her daughter’s face away from social media — to protect her from such misuse. Fans also pointed out that constant intrusion by fans and paparazzi often pushes celebrities to guard their privacy.
Deepika’s genuine family moment was turned into clickbait. Without consent, AI-created photos of her child were circulated for likes and engagement — a disturbing reflection of how far digital boundaries are being crossed.
AI is powerful, but using it to fabricate personal family moments crosses every ethical line. Privacy no longer feels safe when anyone’s image can be recreated for profit or popularity.
As a viewer, you must stay alert. In an age where AI blurs the line between real and fake, always verify before you believe or share what you see online.
The shamelessness with which alleged “influencers” feed pictures of CHILDREN on AI and audaciously upload it in their handles for likes is actually diabolical. This is why celebs are so annoyed. Ya’ll have forgotten the basic lines of humanity. LEAVE THE CHILDREN ALONE pic.twitter.com/bKVyQC84Xf
— Aishwarya | Free (@Aishworryyaa) October 22, 2025




