“Women should not have to accept sexual harassment and abuse as a normal part of their online lives, we need urgent action and legislation to better protect women and girls from the mammoth scale of misogyny they are experiencing online,” Ms Davies added.
The End Violence Against Women Coalition (EVAW) meanwhile urged the Government to set out a timeline for introducing its plans.
Rebecca Hitchen, head of policy and campaigns at EVAW, said: “While we welcome this announcement, we are yet to see a timeline for the offence or any details about the new law, which will be crucial to how effective it is.
“The Government must make good on its commitments to survivors – delaying action will only put women and girls in harm’s way.
“We await confirmation that any new law criminalising the creation of sexually explicit deepfakes will be based on consent rather than the perpetrator’s intent, cover solicitation of image creation (as well as the creation itself), and be listed as a priority offence in the Online Safety Act.”