aibody.art

aibody.art was created as an adults-only space where sensual aesthetics meet technology. What we show here should be beautiful, mature, and responsible. Because we work with AI-generated imagery and a sensitive 18+ theme, we need clear rules. Below we explain what we publish, what we don’t, and why—not only for legal reasons, but to protect audiences and uphold creative ethics.

Why 18+, and how erotica differs from pornography

Our gallery is strictly for adults because it focuses on sensuality. We understand it as erotica—the art of mood, light, color, and suggestion. We care about atmosphere and the beauty of form rather than literal depiction. In practice this means we avoid images where sexuality is shown explicitly and without an artistic context. That choice creates a safer, more comfortable space for diverse viewers, helps maintain a high curatorial standard, and reduces the legal and moderation risks common to pornographic content.

Consent, responsibility, and boundaries

Sensuality requires consent—even in art. We do not accept images with themes of violence, coercion, humiliation, intoxication, or loss of consciousness. We also exclude anything implying familial relationships or exploitation of dependency. Even when an image is fully AI-generated, the subject matter still matters. We don’t publish content that normalizes harmful patterns, even indirectly.

Zero tolerance for depictions of minors

This is absolute. We reject any content that could suggest underage subjects—not only explicitly, but also indirectly through context or styling. Childlike appearance, juvenile body proportions, school motifs, props and descriptions hinting at “youth” are all immediate disqualifiers. AI can mix age signals; if we have any doubt, the image does not enter the gallery.

Real people, deepfakes, and likeness

We respect the right to one’s image. We do not publish likenesses of real people (including public figures) without explicit consent. We do not allow deepfakes or works that “impersonate” someone’s face. When creating with AI, focus on descriptive traits—light, mood, materials—rather than mimicking a specific person.

Style of an era—yes; an artist’s signature—no

We love art history and period aesthetics, but we do not encourage copying the signature of living artists. AI can combine characteristics—Art Nouveau’s organic line, Deco’s sheen, noir’s fog, cyberpunk’s neon. Use that responsibly: describe properties of a style, not an author’s name. It’s ethical toward creators and more creative for you.

Sensitive materials and thematic limits

Beyond violence and underage themes, we exclude content involving animals, hate symbols or incitement, and depictions that dehumanize or objectify people based on their attributes. We also avoid imagery designed to disgust or deliberately trigger trauma. Our goal is sensuality, not shock.

How we moderate: from algorithm to human review

Publication combines automated filtering and curatorial evaluation. Automated tools flag obvious red signals—keywords, props, body proportions, age cues, violence. Then a human checks context: light, framing, manner of depiction. If a work sits on the boundary, we err on the side of caution: we’d rather decline than risk violating our standards. Creators may ask for clarification; we’ll point to specific elements to adjust (styling, description, crop), but safety decisions are final.

Descriptions, tags, and responsible language

Language shapes the experience. In descriptions and tags we focus on aesthetics, mood, and technique; we avoid vulgarity and explicitness. The same goes for metadata: ALT text should be helpful, neutral, and SFW. This supports screen-reader users and aligns with search-engine standards.

Where we draw the line: examples

Works that fit our profile emphasize atmosphere: soft light, delicate rim light, play of materials (satin, velvet, glass), and breathing color. Works that don’t: images with school motifs, juvenile props, extreme sexualization, violence, degradation, or the fetishization of suffering. Even with refined aesthetics, subject matter determines publication.

Community, likes, and the tone of conversation

The ❤ system and “Top 10” help shape community taste, but do not replace responsibility. We take comments and reports seriously. If something concerns you, report it. Moderation reviews each report; if we make a mistake, we correct it and explain what happened. We aim for a courteous climate: critique the aesthetics, not the people.

Privacy and data

We respect user privacy. We analyze traffic in a minimal, anonymized scope needed to run the service. We do not profile minors or target them with communications. If you subscribe to our newsletter, we clearly state what we send and why. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Why these rules matter

This isn’t “paperwork.” Clear standards improve audience comfort and creators’ legal safety. They deter abuse while allowing AI to flourish as an artistic tool. Sensuality need not be vulgar or unsafe; it can be mature, subtle, and tasteful—and that’s precisely the work we aim to showcase here.

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