Washington digital reality posture profile
This page summarizes six tracked digital safety topics for Washington, showing where public legislative coverage currently looks more proactive, more reactive, broader, or thinner. It is a structural posture signal based on public disclosures, not a political or legal grade.
Last reviewed May 12, 2026.
Educational summary only
Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.
Overall state posture signal
Reactive-leaning posture with narrow tracked coverage.
Based on six tracked topics and public disclosures.
Posture meter
Lean and breadth across six tracked topics. Not a quality or political score.
Lean
Reactive-leaning
Breadth
Narrow tracked coverage
Washington Deepfakes law summary
Based on adjacent fraud, privacy, impersonation, or child-safety coverage.
Washington's SB 5152 (Chapter 360, 2023 Laws) has been in effect since July 23, 2023, signed May 9, 2023. The law gives candidates and campaigns a path to seek relief if synthetic media is used against them in a campaign for elected office. The rule is squarely about campaigns — Washington hasn't enacted a broader rule covering deepfakes for minors or outside campaign contexts.
Educational summary only
Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.
Why this status
Based on adjacent fraud, privacy, impersonation, or child-safety coverage.
What this means
- The protection is narrow but real: it covers synthetic media used against a candidate in a campaign for elected office, not deepfakes in social feeds, group chats, or apps your kids use.
- The depicted candidate is the one with standing to seek relief — that's the law's main mechanism. It doesn't open a civil claim for private individuals depicted in non-campaign deepfakes.
- For AI-fakes outside campaign contexts — including content involving minors — Washington hasn't addressed those uses at the state level. Federal rules and platform policies are what apply to those gaps.
What to do next
- Read SB 5152 (Chapter 360, 2023) on the Washington State Legislature site for the exact campaign-context definitions and the candidate's path to seek relief.
- If you're concerned about a non-campaign use of an AI fake — in a school chat, an app, a private message — Washington's SB 5152 isn't the relevant rule. Check federal protections and the platform's own policy instead.
Citation-grade sources
Official sources
1Washington SB 5152 — synthetic media in campaigns for elective office
Official textCitation: SB 5152 (2023)
Observed: 2026-05-05Official Washington State Legislature bill summary confirming governor signature on 2023-05-09 and effective date of 2023-07-23. Enacted as Chapter 360, 2023 Laws.
Open source
Provenance
Source basis
Official links still being curated
Confidence
High confidence
Review scope
Review centered on currently tracked state-level law
Last reviewed
May 8, 2026
References
Washington SB 5152 — synthetic media in campaigns for elective office
Official Washington State Legislature bill summary confirming governor signature on 2023-05-09 and effective date of 2023-07-23. Enacted as Chapter 360, 2023 Laws.
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