The campaign aims to help school children identify misinformation and AI-generated content.
“If it’s used in the right way it can be really positive,” Angry Ginge said of improvements in AI technology. “But unfortunately, there’s people that use it in the wrong way – and that is only going to get bigger.
“It is going to become a lot harder to recognise the deepfakes compared to the real stuff – and it’s going to become a lot more realistic.”
The content creator opened up about his experience as a victim of AI-generated deepfakes – when content showing himself with a woman began to circulate in November 2025, ahead of his experience as a contestant on I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!.
“There was a situation before I went into the jungle where someone had faked me having a girlfriend,” Angry Ginge said.
“They had put us together at the airport and the press were thinking about releasing it and everything.”
He said, in reality, he did not have a girlfriend and the images had in fact been made with deepfake AI.
“And I thought that if adults – who ‘should know better’ – are believing it, where does that leave the youth of today?
“Personally, I believe anyone who’s 13 or 14 or below shouldn’t have TikTok because it’s flooded with loads of rubbish,” the influencer said. “No one below 16 should be on X.”
“I wouldn’t say everyone under 16 shouldn’t be on social media – but there’s definitely certain things that need tweaking.”