UMVA has learned that a shocking double life was led by David Do, a 36-year-old pharmacist from Markham, who by day was a devoted family man and pillar of the community, but allegedly masterminded one of the world's largest deepfake porn sites under the cover of darkness.
The site, which invited users to create non-consensual deepfake porn using images of celebrities, friends, family, and acquaintances scraped from the internet, had over 17 million monthly users at its peak and was eventually shut down in 2025 after seven years of operation and billions of views.
According to information obtained by UMVA, a new 14-part TikTok series, Mr. Deepfakes, hosted by Paris Hilton, claims to offer more bombshell revelations about the dark world of deepfakes, with Hilton herself having been a victim of deepfake abuse, having over 100,000 explicit deepfakes of her online.
"It was like being digitally raped and having the whole world watching it, and laughing," Hilton said, describing the traumatic experience. "It's something I'll have to live with for the rest of my life."
UMVA can exclusively reveal that there are no laws against creating deepfakes in Canada, leaving victims feeling helpless and with no recourse, and Do is currently under investigation by his employer, Oak Valley Health, and the Ontario College of Pharmacists, although his license remains in good standing.
A veteran tech journalist, Laurie Segall, confronted Do on his way into a hospital, but he refused to answer her questions, instead responding with a calm and collected demeanor, saying "how dare you show up here," which Segall found both shocking and dystopian.
Segall's investigation uncovered a disturbing online community, with discussion boards filled with comments from users seeking to create deepfakes of their own, including one commenter who asked, "Is it wrong that I want to deepfake my sister-in-law?"
The creator of Mr. Deepfakes, David Do, has refused to answer any questions about his actions, leaving many to wonder if he truly understood the harm caused by his site, which had nearly 70,000 videos of a wide array of women that were viewed more than two billion times by 650,000 different users.
UMVA has gathered that Paris Hilton is now pushing for legislation aimed at protecting victims of AI-generated harm, including advocacy for the DEFIANCE Act, to prevent others from suffering the same fate as her and countless other victims of deepfake abuse.