The most dangerous category involves AI-generated videos and stills where Kajol’s face is mapped onto another person’s body. These fakes usually surface on social media ads for dubious products: anti-aging creams, weight loss gummies, or get-rich-quick schemes. In these fakes, Kajol appears to be endorsing a product from her "personal lifestyle routine"—even though she has never heard of the brand.
Before you click that link promising "shocking never-seen-before photos of Kajol," run this checklist: all fake fucking photos of kajol devgan link
Over the last six months, we have tracked three distinct categories of fake imagery circulating under Kajol’s name: The most dangerous category involves AI-generated videos and
1. The "Morph" (Old photos + new heads) The most amateur. Scammers take a stock photo of a model in a compromising position and slap Kajol’s face onto the neck. These usually have jagged hairlines, mismatched skin tones, and fingers that look like sausages. These usually have jagged hairlines, mismatched skin tones,
2. The AI "Lifestyle" Hallucination Midjourney and Stable Diffusion have made it terrifyingly easy. Prompts like "Kajol Devgan walking in New York street style, paparazzi angle, tight dress" generate hyper-realistic images. But look at the hands (too many fingers) or the background text (gibberish symbols). These "lifestyle" fakes often place her in locations she hasn’t visited or outfits she never wore on Instagram.
3. The Deepfake Scam (The most dangerous) These are video clips with audio dubbed using AI. Scammers use Kajol’s voice from old interviews to make it look like she is promoting a weight loss gummy or a "get rich quick" crypto scheme. These link to phishing sites disguised as "exclusive lifestyle magazines."