AI videos of sexualised black women removed from TikTok after BBC investigation
Nearly all the accounts were on Instagram and about a third also had versions on TikTok.
Account names include terms such as "black", "noir", "dark" and "ebony". Several include comments about white males in their posts, such as "loves white men" and "why I need a white guy in my life". Many of the accounts follow or like each other.
The sites labelled the imagery as AI-generated, but the Instagram accounts did not.
One of the accounts shut down by TikTok - though still operating on Instagram at the time of publication - has caused further anger by stealing videos from real people.
"I was angry," Riya told the BBC.
"Of course my videos are all out there… It doesn't mean that you can just take it and steal it and post it as your own. "
A chain of links from the account leads to paid-for adult content. "I'm not sure if I'm more concerned about them taking my video to promote their explicit content or [that] people actually believe in that," she says.
Many viewers appear to treat the avatars as real, despite their unrealistic features. In posts or Instagram stories, some of the accounts deny using AI, including the one that took Riya's content.
TikTok banned it after the BBC approached it for comment.
While "that fetish" may have existed in the past, AI "gives it new purchase", he says.
Nine Instagram accounts the BBC has tracked appear to no longer exist
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