"Get an arrest warrant if you think you are right," Rotondo reportedly told officials prior to the sanctions hearing, the Brisbane Times reported.
Later, in front of the judge, he unsuccessfully argued that he didn't intend to out his victims by email. He claimed he didn't know the court order was attached to the email or that it contained his victims' names, The Guardian reported.
"The email I received had more than 80 pages of writing," Rotondo said. "I didn't read all the pages. I just forwarded the email."
Eventually, Rotondo gave police his passwords to delete the images posted on Mr. Deepfakes. But the judge noted that Rotondo appeared resistant to removing deepfakes and continued creating an unknown number of deepfakes—which may include further charges from Queensland police that he possibly targeted "a number" of facilities and businesses on the day he allegedly hit the high school. He perhaps was motivated to leave the images online, as toxic Mr. Deepfakes uploaders could earn as much as $1,500 for convincing non-consensual deepfakes of public figures.
"The history of the matter suggests that, were he still at liberty and perhaps in another country, he would not have been so accommodating," Derrington said.
Australia seeks to end “incalculable devastation”
Governments globally are grappling with a stark rise in non-consensual deepfake porn, with an ever-widening lens that targets not just the people who create and share images or the sites that host and sell them, but also the social media platforms that don't catch and delete the harmful content. Earlier this month, the US passed a law threatening heavy fines and prison time for platforms that don't remove the images when they're reported. Under that law, the Take It Down Act, Wired reported that platforms risk roughly $50,000 in penalties per violation if deepfakes aren't removed within 48 hours of receiving a report.
In Australia, Inman Grant wants to find a way to end the "lingering and incalculable devastation" that she said predominantly female victims must endure because it's "shockingly" free and easy to use "thousands of open-source AI apps" to make deepfake porn.
Because Rotondo seems to represent the kind of unapologetic repeat deepfaker who digs his heels in to defend his AI-generated fake sex images, Inman Grant asked for the maximum penalties on Monday. The eSafety commission's spokesperson told The Guardian that the request "reflected the seriousness of the breaches" and "the significant impacts on the women targeted."
"The penalty will deter others from engaging in such harmful conduct," the spokesperson said.