Overview
- The AGU, which issued the notice Wednesday, April 1, gave Google five days to strip listed pages from results and to install filters that block similar sites.
- The order targets so‑called “nudify” services that use AI to fake nudity from ordinary photos without consent, a form of abuse that harms real people.
- AGU supplied an initial list of more than 40 links for deindexing, and outlets reported no public response from Google at the time of publication.
- The filing argues that indexing these sites enables mass access and says Google’s current rules have not stopped the tools from being easy to find.
- The legal case cites child‑protection duties, Brazil’s Internet Civil Framework and the data protection law, and points to Supreme Court guidance that platforms may be liable if they fail to act once alerted.