Happening right now? Start the 48-Hour Protocol.
Bully.org AI Deepfake Prevention

The bully you can't punch.

AI can put any kid's face on any image. The fake spreads faster than the truth. Families with a plan get it contained, reported, and taken down. Families without one lose the first 48 hours to panic. This is the plan.

Check an image Read the protocol
Start where you are

Four situations. Four starting points.

Everything here is free. Nothing you check or generate is uploaded or stored. That is not a slogan, it is how the tool is built.

Right now

"I think this image is fake."

Run it through our checker. It reads provenance data, camera metadata, and AI generator markers. Then it builds your Evidence Kit: the school letter, the takedown request, the police summary. Pre-written. You fill in names, not paragraphs.

In crisis

"It's already spreading."

The 48-Hour Response Protocol. Fifteen steps in the order that works: what to save, what never to delete, who to tell, and when. Built on the published playbooks of NCMEC, the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, and the FBI. Printable.

Before it happens

"I want my kid ready."

What deepfakes and nudify apps are, the warning signs a kid is being targeted, and the three conversations to have this week. Including the one rule that keeps good kids out of legal trouble: never forward, not even to warn a friend.

Get help

"Who can take this down?"

The removal tools that work. NCMEC's Take It Down for minors. StopNCII for adults. Every major platform's report path. And your rights under federal law: platforms must remove reported intimate imagery within 48 hours.

Why Bully.org. We don't teach kids to fight back. We teach them they don't have to. A deepfake is a new weapon aimed at the oldest target there is: a kid's standing with their peers. The image is synthetic. The harm is not. So we treat it the way we treat every form of bullying: skill-based responses, a clear plan, and a kid whose confidence doesn't depend on what a fake picture says about them.