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Coronation Street mystery as character’s business goes up in flames amid deepfake porn horror

CORONATION Street was rocked by a surprise fire as one character’s business went up in flames on the show.

The soap shock came amid a turbulent time for Abi and Kevin Webster after her deepfake porn turmoil.

ITV
Kevin and Abi were rocked by a surprise fire[/caption]
ITV
Kevin discovered the news on his phone[/caption]
ITV
It was Stefan’s office which had caught flames[/caption]

For the last few weeks, the married couple have faced hell after it was revealed that Stefan Brent had created a slew of AI porn videos of his nemesis Abi after she got a documentary about Stefan’s murderous son Corey axed.

Corey brutally killed Abi’s son Seb in a horror attack and was sent to prison crushing his dreams of being a pro footballer.

Since discovering Abi was behind the cancellation of a programme set to follow him returning to his footballing career, Stefan shockingly created a slew of fake sex tapes appearing to star Abi.

It has resulted in a war as Abi and Kevin set out on a mission to prove to the police that he was the man responsible for the videos.

In tonight’s episode, Stefan turned up at the Webster house after organising a set-up to ensure Kevin and Abi would not be there.

He made a bogus phone call to the pair to tell them that he wanted to speak to them in a bid to bury the hatchet as the videos continued to spread on the internet.

It resulted in the pair heading to meet Stefan, unaware that he was heading to their house knowing that they were out.

Stefan convinced Jack that he was a customer of Kevin’s and as a result managed to get inside the house.

In the process, he was able to locate the burner phone that Kevin had been hiding which contained the crucial evidence that he was responsible for the videos.

He then phoned the police where he reported Kevin for theft with him now being free to use the CCTV footage without fear they would go searching for the incriminating phone.

With Kevin charged and bailed for a hearing date, the Webster’s were left in despair at how their lives had been wrecked by Stefan once again.

However, a shock mystery occurred when it was revealed that Stefan’s publishing office had been engulfed in flames.

As Kevin was scrolling on his phone, he said to Abi: “Have you seen this, it is on the local news feed?”

The story was about a burning building which Kevin soon revealed was at Stefan’s place of work.

He said: “Have you spotted where it is? It is Stefan Brent’s office.

What is a deepfake?

Deepfake videos are made using a blend of artificial intelligence and computer imagery to create a manipulated version of a real person.

The technology can create convincing but fictional photos or videos from scratch.

Voice clones are usually dubbed into the video to make it more authentic too.

The term “deepfake” comes from the underlying artificial intelligence technology called “deep learning”.

There are several ways to make deepfakes but the most common method uses deep neural networks involving autoencoders to create a face swap.

Deepfake videos are legal.

However, depending on what is contained in the video they could potentially breach legal codes.

For example, if they are pornographic face-swap videos or photos, the victim will be able to claim defamation or copyright.

In 2022, the BBC reported a planned new law would make sharing pornographic deepfakes without consent a crime in England and Wales.

“I wonder what happened?”

Abi replied: “Maybe, the fires of hell got out of hand.

“Who cares, deepfake HQ has burnt to the ground, it is not like I am going to shed a tear over that is is?”

She continued: “For once in his life, he got what was coming and it couldn’t have happened to a nicer bloke.”

But just what or who caused the raging fire and does Abi know more than she is letting on?

Coronation Street is streaming now on ITVX.

Most complained about soap storylines

Over the years, all three of the main soaps have featured plots that have had even die-hard fans reaching for their phones and laptops so they can get in touch with Ofcom and complain. Here are just some of the most scandalous…

  • EastEnders baby theft: 13,400 Ofcom complaints – Back in 2011, EastEnders was flooded with complaints when Ronnie Branning (RIP) swapped her baby for the dead son of Kat Moon. The storyline drew the most number of objections in the soap’s long history and saw it roundly criticised by campaigners – with 13,400 flying in over the course of the storyline. Some viewers called it “distressing” and “horrific” but Ofcom ruled the scenes were not “unduly disturbing”.
  • Emmerdale dog-napping: 550 Ofcom complaints – Back in 2016, Ross Barton and Charity Dingle came up with a plan to steal a dog and hold it ransom – but viewers didn’t like it one bit. The nation’s pet owners rose up, insisting the storyline would encourage copycats (not to mention copydogs). Complaints over two episodes totalled a staggering 550 and soap writers quickly learnt you don’t mess with animal-lovers.
  • Coronation Street double murder: 546 Ofcom complaints – Marginally less people complained about a gruesome double murder than objected to a dog-napping plot when Pat Phelan was at the centre of a spate of killings. First he forced Andy Carver to shoot dead Vinny Ashford – and then Pat killed Andy. All the bloodshed back in 2017 proved to be too much for some viewers, who lodged complaints in vast numbers about the “violent scenes”.
  • ITV
    Kevin also faced a police probe[/caption]
    ITV
    Are either of them responsible for the disaster?[/caption]

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