Fan-topia.mondomonger.deepfakes.karen.gillan.as... Jun 2026

In the aftermath, Karen Gillan praised Echo and the fans for their bravery and ingenuity. The actress emphasized the importance of critical thinking and media literacy in the face of emerging technologies like deepfakes. Echo, now hailed as a hero, continued to work on improving FanGuard, ensuring that Fan-Topia remained a safe and vibrant community for fans to enjoy.

However, the MondoMonger identity also illustrates a common tactic within the deepfake world: creators often maintain multiple profiles across different platforms to segment their audiences. The search results for this handle overwhelmingly point back to these original art communities, not directly to deepfake content. This suggests a strategy of operational security—keeping legitimate art public while hiding illicit activities behind paywalls and unlinked profiles. It underscores how the skills used to create art in a "fan-topia" can be dangerously repurposed.

: Uses deep learning (GANs - Generative Adversarial Networks). Fan-Topia & Mondomonger

The deepfake phenomenon is not a standalone technology but a specific, malicious application of broader generative AI tools.

The Mondomonger screams.

The deepfake crisis will not be solved by any single law or technical fix. It will require a coordinated effort across governments, financial institutions, technology companies, and civil society. It will require platforms like Fan-Topia to be held accountable not just for what they host but for the business model they enable. And it will require all of us—consumers, citizens, human beings—to ask difficult questions about what we are willing to look at, to pay for, to tolerate, when the face on the screen is not quite real.

[Insert Link]

While the NBC News investigation did not specifically name Karen Gillan among the celebrities whose images appear in the videos sold through Fan-Topia, the Scottish actress—best known for her roles as Amy Pond in Doctor Who , Nebula in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and Ruby Roundhouse in the Jumanji franchise—occupies a representative place among the countless public figures whose likenesses have been weaponized by deepfake technology.

If you are looking for a blog post that discusses this topic, or if you want to write one yourself, here is an analysis of why that title works and what the content likely covers (or should cover).

In the aftermath, Karen Gillan praised Echo and the fans for their bravery and ingenuity. The actress emphasized the importance of critical thinking and media literacy in the face of emerging technologies like deepfakes. Echo, now hailed as a hero, continued to work on improving FanGuard, ensuring that Fan-Topia remained a safe and vibrant community for fans to enjoy.

However, the MondoMonger identity also illustrates a common tactic within the deepfake world: creators often maintain multiple profiles across different platforms to segment their audiences. The search results for this handle overwhelmingly point back to these original art communities, not directly to deepfake content. This suggests a strategy of operational security—keeping legitimate art public while hiding illicit activities behind paywalls and unlinked profiles. It underscores how the skills used to create art in a "fan-topia" can be dangerously repurposed.

: Uses deep learning (GANs - Generative Adversarial Networks). Fan-Topia & Mondomonger

The deepfake phenomenon is not a standalone technology but a specific, malicious application of broader generative AI tools.

The Mondomonger screams.

The deepfake crisis will not be solved by any single law or technical fix. It will require a coordinated effort across governments, financial institutions, technology companies, and civil society. It will require platforms like Fan-Topia to be held accountable not just for what they host but for the business model they enable. And it will require all of us—consumers, citizens, human beings—to ask difficult questions about what we are willing to look at, to pay for, to tolerate, when the face on the screen is not quite real.

[Insert Link]

While the NBC News investigation did not specifically name Karen Gillan among the celebrities whose images appear in the videos sold through Fan-Topia, the Scottish actress—best known for her roles as Amy Pond in Doctor Who , Nebula in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and Ruby Roundhouse in the Jumanji franchise—occupies a representative place among the countless public figures whose likenesses have been weaponized by deepfake technology.

If you are looking for a blog post that discusses this topic, or if you want to write one yourself, here is an analysis of why that title works and what the content likely covers (or should cover).