Truth, Virtue, Honesty, Integrity. Too many charities and NGO’s need sanctions

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Charities Using AI-Generated Photos of Starving Children to Raise Money

Despicable.

By Joe Wilkins

Published Oct 21, 2025 1:14 PM EDT

The world's leading Non-government organizations are weaponizing AI to produce heavily racialized misery porn.
Freepik (Screenshot)

The scenes are grisly: stick-thin children huddling together in a muddy stream, white volunteers surrounded by throngs of starving Africans, and Arab children in refugee camps holding tin bowls.

The only problem? None of them are real. In a macabre phenomenon sweeping the world’s leading non-government organizations, The Guardian reports, charity groups are now weaponizing AI to produce heavily racialized misery-slop — replete with nonexistent imagery of poverty, violence, and climate disasters.

“The images replicate the visual grammar of poverty — children with empty plates, cracked earth, stereotypical visuals,” Arsenii Alenichev, a researcher at the Institute of Tropical Medicine, told the newspaper.

Alenichev was the lead author on a commentary article recently published in the journal The Lancet covering the issue of charities and AI suffering, something he calls “poverty porn 2.0.”

The researcher distinguishes the AI phenomenon from earlier ideas of poverty porn, a term coined in 2007 to describe the kinds of voyeuristic imagery taken of poor or oppressed people in order to shock viewers in rich, developed countries.

Then, the goal was to goad viewers into donating after shocking their senses, playing into the fantasy that their charity will solve the problem. In poverty porn 2.0, the subject of the images have become the fantasy, avoiding even the financial and ethical costs of capturing real suffering.

“It is quite clear that various organizations are starting to consider synthetic images instead of real photography, because it’s cheap and you don’t need to bother with consent and everything,” Alenichev told The Guardian.

Altogether, the researcher says he’s collected over 100 synthetic images being used by charities in their campaigns to raise money. They come from groups like the UK’s Plan International, which posted AI-generated images as part of an anti-child marriage campaign, and even the United Nations, which The Guardian says generated “re-enactments” of sexual violence.

It’s a particularly disgusting move given that there’s no shortage of poor and immiserated people in the real world. Doubly ironic is the fact that AI is behind this new type of poverty porn is fueled by the same wealth inequality and pollution that many charities are ostensibly working to ameliorate.

If NGO officials are really interested in ending global suffering, their best bet would be to stop fantasizing about poverty and start asking why people remain poor in the first place.

More on AI: Bernie Sanders Has a Fascinating Idea About How to Prevent AI From Wiping Out the Economy

Joe Wilkins

Contributing Writer

I’m a tech and transit correspondent for Futurism, where my beat includes transportation, infrastructure, and the role of emerging technologies in governance, surveillance, and labor.

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About michelleclarke2015

Life event that changes all: Horse riding accident in Zimbabwe in 1993, a fractured skull et al including bipolar anxiety, chronic fatigue …. co-morbidities (Nietzche 'He who has the reason why can deal with any how' details my health history from 1993 to date). 17th 2017 August operation for breast cancer (no indications just an appointment came from BreastCheck through the Post). Trinity College Dublin Business Economics and Social Studies (but no degree) 1997-2003; UCD 1997/1998 night classes) essays, projects, writings. Trinity Horizon Programme 1997/98 (Centre for Women Studies Trinity College Dublin/St. Patrick's Foundation (Professor McKeon) EU Horizon funded: research study of 15 women (I was one of this group and it became the cornerstone of my journey to now 2017) over 9 mth period diagnosed with depression and their reintegration into society, with special emphasis on work, arts, further education; Notes from time at Trinity Horizon Project 1997/98; Articles written for Irishhealth.com 2003/2004; St Patricks Foundation monthly lecture notes for a specific period in time; Selection of Poetry including poems written by people I know; Quotations 1998-2017; other writings mainly with theme of social justice under the heading Citizen Journalism Ireland. Letters written to friends about life in Zimbabwe; Family history including Michael Comyn KC, my grandfather, my grandmother's family, the O'Donnellan ffrench Blake-Forsters; Moral wrong: An acrimonious divorce but the real injustice was the Catholic Church granting an annulment – you can read it and make your own judgment, I have mine. Topics I have written about include annual Brain Awareness week, Mashonaland Irish Associataion in Zimbabwe, Suicide (a life sentence to those left behind); Nostalgia: Tara Hill, Co. Meath.
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