Fernandes renews call for digital violence reforms on Caren Miosga with Justice Minister

In a follow-up to her recent Tagesthemen appearance, actress Collien Fernandes reiterated criticisms of Germany's legal protections against sexualized online violence on ARD's Caren Miosga, joined by Federal Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig, who outlined upcoming deepfake law reforms.

Building on her prior statements about experiences with digital violence allegedly perpetrated by ex-husband Christian Ulmen—including fake profiles sharing intimate images—Fernandes called Germany a 'perpetrator's paradise' due to low reporting rates (2.4%) and inadequate responses, like her dismissed complaint.

Justice Minister Hubig announced a draft law criminalizing pornographic deepfakes, with plans to extend to marked fakes and mandate IP storage for perpetrator identification. 'It's about criminalizing the defamatory,' she said. Fernandes welcomed the steps but urged harsher penalties, better police training, and school programs, citing Spain's stricter laws as a model.

Other guests, including Ronen Steinke and Theresia Crone, rebuked attempts to link the issue to immigration, with Hubig stressing focus on violence against women regardless of origin. Ulmen's representatives continue to deny the allegations.

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Actress Collien Fernandes denounces Germany as 'perpetrator paradise' for digital violence in TV interview, with symbolic justice and cyberbullying elements.
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Collien Fernandes calls Germany perpetrator paradise for digital violence

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Actress Collien Fernandes called Germany a 'perpetrator paradise' in ARD Tagesthemen and criticized a 'justice failure' in protecting against digital violence. She leveled serious accusations against her ex-husband Christian Ulmen and calls for better victim protection. Proceedings against Ulmen are underway in Spain.

Actress Collien Fernandes is cutting short her filming in Asia to meet female politicians in Berlin this week, pushing for tougher regulations against digital violence. Following her recent TV interview and criminal complaint against ex-partner Christian Ulmen, she reiterates that Germany must not be a 'perpetrator's paradise'.

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German Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig is demanding tougher action against the creation and distribution of sexualized images generated by artificial intelligence. She announces plans for a digital violence protection law to better safeguard victims. The issue stems particularly from deepfakes produced on platforms like X using tools such as Grok.

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