Online violence against women in public life is becoming increasingly technologically sophisticated, finds a new report co-authored by researchers at City St Georgeโs, University of London.
The report โTipping point: Online violence impacts, manifestations and redress in the AI ageโ, published by UN Women, was produced in partnership with City St Georgeโs, and the digital TheNerve, which is a forensics lab founded by Nobel laureate Maria Ressa.
The report analysed the experiences of 641 women journalists and media workers, activists, and human rightsโ defenders from 119 countries. The women were surveyed in late 2025, and the researchers concluded:
- 6 per cent of respondents have been subjected to deepfakes or manipulated images and videos
- 27 per cent of women respondents were targeted with unsolicited sexual advances via direct message, receiving unwanted intimate images, โcyberflashingโ, sexual innuendos or nonconsensual sexting
- 12 per cent of respondents had their personal images, including those of an intimate nature, shared without their consent

These attacks were often deliberate and coordinated, aiming to silence women in public life while undermining their professional credibility and personal reputations.
The impacts include an alarming rate of mental health diagnoses and self-censorship:
- ย Nearly one-quarter (24 per cent) of respondents have experienced anxiety and/or depression linked to online violence
- 13 per cent reported being diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
- 41 per cent of respondents said they self-censored on social media to avoid being abused, and 19 per cent were self-censoring at work as a result.
The study found that while 25 per cent of respondents had reported incidents of online violence to the police and 15 per cent had taken legal action, justice still eludes them:
- 24 per cent of the women who had reported online violence felt victim-blamed by the police, having been asked questions like โWhat did you do to provoke the violence?โ
- 24 per cent also said the police made them to feel responsible for shielding themselves from further violence.
Julie Posetti, Professor of Journalism and Chair of the Centre for Journalism and Democracy at City St Georgeโs is the projectโs principal researcher and the reportโs lead author. She said:
โAI-assisted โvirtual rapeโ is now at the fingertips of perpetrators. This phenomenon accelerates the harm from online violence inflicted on women in public life.
โThis violence serves to fuel the reversal of womenโs hard-won rights in a climate of rising authoritarianism, democratic backsliding and networked misogyny.
โThe rollback of womenโs rights is enabled and exacerbated by technologies which โ by design โamplify misogynistic hate speech for profit.โ
Co-author Lea Hellmueller, Associate Professor of Journalism, and Associate Dean for Research and Innovation at City St Georgeโs, added:
โThe chilling effect of online violence is pushing women out of public life.
โLaw enforcement is outsourcing the responsibility for protection to the survivors by telling women to remove themselves from social media, to avoid speaking publicly about controversial issues, to move into less visible roles at work, or to take leave from their respective careers.
โThis shows that avoidance techniques โ self-censorship or quitting โ are still significantly more likely to be used by women rather than resistance techniques such as reporting online attacks to the police.โ
Pauline Renaud, Lecturer in Journalism at City St Georgeโs, and fellow co-author of the study, said:
โGoing to the police or taking legal action do not necessarily lead to justice for survivors.
โWe need more effective education and training of law enforcement and judicial actors to support action in cases of technology-facilitated violence against women and girls.
โThis needs to be matched by political will to effectively regulate Big Tech companies that use their outsized financial and political power to undermine progress in this area.โ
IMAGE CREDIT: NASA.




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