Oregon Synthetic Intimate Imagery (HB 2299)
Effective date
Penalty
Criminal penalties per Oregon criminal code.
Obligations mapped
Tracked
Overview
Criminal penalties for creating or distributing AI-generated nonconsensual intimate imagery in Oregon. Expands intimate-image offenses to cover realistic synthetic depictions.
This is an AI-specific state law.
See if this regulation applies to your company with the free exposure scan.
Who this applies to
This regulation applies to the following roles:
- Developers of covered AI systems
- Deployers and users of covered AI systems
- Organizations operating in Oregon
This regulation applies to both companies that build AI products and companies that use AI tools from other vendors.
See enrolled statute text at the official source.
AI categories covered
- Consumer-facing AI
Specific AI use cases:
- Content generation
- synthetic media manipulation
- voice likeness synthesis
- political synthetic media
What this requires you to do
Detailed obligation packs are not yet mapped for this entry in XIRA. Obligation areas from the catalog are listed below.
What this requires you to do
Prohibited practices
Avoid conduct the statute bans, including harmful manipulation and intentional discrimination.
Regulation summaries are simplified for readability and may not capture every nuance of the underlying statute. Verify important details against primary sources linked on this page.
Enforcement and penalties
Criminal penalties per Oregon criminal code.
Penalty amounts are based on statutory text and may be subject to adjustment, judicial interpretation, or enforcement discretion.
Related regulations
- In EffectPrivacy ADM
Oregon Consumer Privacy Act - Profiling Provisions
Grants Oregon consumers the right to opt out of profiling for decisions with legal or significant effects. Opt-out limited to profiling in furtherance of solely automated decisions (narrower than Colorado, Connecticut, and Montana which have removed the solely qualifier). 2025 amendments (SB 2008, SB 3875) prohibit sale of personal data for consumers under 16 and precise geolocation data (effective October 1, 2025). The Oregon CPA included a 30-day cure window that was not permanent: it ended January 1, 2026, after which the Attorney General is no longer required to provide a cure notice before enforcement.
Effective
- In EffectAI-Specific
Oregon Election Deepfake Disclosure (SB 1571)
Requires disclosure statement on political communications containing synthetic media in Oregon elections.
Effective
Oregon AI regulation guide lists every tracked rule for this jurisdiction with timelines and obligation tallies.
Regulation summaries are simplified for readability and may not capture every nuance of the underlying statute. Verify important details against primary sources linked on this page.