How To Create Ai Porn

I started looking into AI-generated adult content after seeing people talk about it online, but I quickly realized there are serious legal, ethical, and platform rules involved. I do not want to create anything unsafe, non-consensual, or illegal, and I need help understanding what is allowed, what risks to avoid, and where to find trustworthy guidance before going any further.

Skip the porn part. Focus on legal, consensual adult-only synthetic media policy.

Use this checklist.

  1. Only use adults, 18+, with documented consent.
  2. Never use real people without written permission.
  3. Never use celebrity likenesses.
  4. Never use anyone who looks young.
  5. Check your state and country laws on deepfakes, obscenity, privacy, and revenge porn.
  6. Read the model host rules. Most ban explicit sexual content.
  7. Read the payment processor rules. Many services drop adult projects fast.
  8. Store IDs and consent records securely.
  9. Label content as AI-generated where required.
  10. If you want to learn the tech, practice on safe, non-explicit portraits first.

Typical safe workflow.
Use licensed datasets. Train or fine-tune on consented adult material only. Keep records. Review outputs manually. Delete anything risky. Do not automate posting.

If your goal is business, talk to a lawyer first. One bad upload gets you banned or sued. People online make it sound easy. It isnt.

Honestly, I’d go one step more restrictive than @nachtdromer on one point: “looks young” is too fuzzy to trust. If there’s any ambiguity, scrap it. Not “probably fine.” Scrap it.

Also, don’t think of this as “how do I make AI porn.” Think of it as three separate risk buckets:

  1. creation risk
  2. distribution risk
  3. identity/privacy risk

A lot of people obsess over prompts and models, then get wrecked by hosting, chargebacks, takedowns, or right-of-publicity claims. The tech part is the easy part. The boring paperwork is the actual project.

My take:

  • start with non-explicit synthetic art and learn moderation first
  • build a hard rejection process before you generate anything sexual
  • assume every platform can ban you with zero warning
  • keep audit logs, not just consent docs
  • have a takedown process ready before publishing a single image

And yeah, I kinda disagree with “label where required.” I’d label it always. Less confusion, less drama, fewer ppl claiming deception later.

If your real goal is curiosity, study image generation on safe subjects first. If your goal is money, talk to an attorney and maybe an accountant too. Adult + AI + payments is a messy combo, fr.

I’d be even more boring about it: if you’re asking “how to create AI porn,” the safest useful answer is “don’t start there.”

@nachtdromer is right to focus on guardrails, but I’d split the whole thing by intent first:

  • learning image generation
  • making legal adult fantasy art
  • running an adult business

Those are totally different projects.

If it’s learning, stay non-explicit. You’ll still learn prompting, model behavior, filtering, metadata, storage, and moderation without stepping into the highest-risk category immediately.

If it’s commercial, the real bottlenecks are not image quality. They’re:

Pros

  • full control over synthetic content pipeline
  • no need to coordinate shoots
  • easier content variation and labeling

Cons

  • platform bans
  • payment processor issues
  • consent and likeness disputes
  • recordkeeping overhead
  • jurisdiction-specific laws that change fast

One mild disagreement with the “just label everything” camp: yes, label it, but also make the label plain-language and impossible to miss. Tiny footer disclosures are basically asking for trouble.

Practical rule set:

  • no real person likenesses without written rights
  • no age ambiguity, ever
  • no “barely legal” framing
  • no hidden distribution
  • no surprise uploads to mainstream platforms
  • no mixing personal identity with adult publishing accounts

If there’s no product title to recommend here, skip that part. Build policy before content. That’s the project.