Content warning: This article contains descriptions of non-consensual sexual imagery.
Depending on which of his social media profiles you were looking at, Mark Resan was either a marketing lead at Google or working for a dental implant company, a human resources company and a business software firm – all at the same time.

But a Bellingcat investigation has found that the Hungarian national is the key figure behind, and the likely owner of, at least two deepfake porn websites – RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn – that until recently were selling paid subscriptions.
There is no question about the nature of these websites. RefacePorn’s landing page shows an explicit video of a woman performing a sexual act. As the video plays, her face is replaced with a variety of other women’s faces. The text above declares: “Face swap deepfake porn. Upload your face!”
Deepfake porn sites such as these, which use artificial intelligence to create sexually explicit images and videos – usually without the consent of those whose faces or bodies are featured – have proliferated at an alarming rate in recent years. The impact on victims has been described as “life-shattering”, with the mental health effects similar to those reported by victims of sexual assault.
While the technology to make these synthetic images is not new, the rise of mainstream AI image generator tools and “Nudify” apps has made it more widely available to people without deep technical expertise. Earlier this year, New Zealand MP Laura McClure held up an AI-generated nude of herself in parliament, describing how it took her less than five minutes to create after a quick Google search.
A 2024 study by the My Image My Choice campaign found that there was a 1,780 percent increase in sexually explicit deepfakes last year compared to 2019. Almost all (99 percent) of victims were women, according to a 2023 study by Security Hero.

The creation of such images and videos is now illegal in a few countries, including the US and the UK, but legislation has not caught up in many others, and the owners of platforms that enable this content often face no repercussions. In May 2024, the EU passed a directive which mandates that member states – including Hungary, where Resan resides – criminalise the creation and distribution of non-consensual sexual deepfakes by June 2027.
Alexios Mantzarlis, co-founder of Indicator, a news site that focuses on digital deception, said his publication estimates that deepfake porn sites likely make millions of dollars a year.
“The incentive system will continue to exist until the tools become too toxic to handle for domain hosts and content delivery networks,” added Mantzarlis, who is also the director of the Security, Trust and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech.
Bellingcat’s investigation into RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn – which spanned corporate registries, domain name registrations, payment redirect sites, website code and leaked data – led us back to Resan.
By simulating the purchase of subscriptions on these websites, Bellingcat was led through a series of redirects to a payments dashboard by Peerwallet, a payment processor that recorded more than US$331,000 in sales from July 2024 to August 2025 by Dorocron LLP. Dorocron is a Canadian-registered company whose main – if not sole – source of income appeared to be from paid subscriptions to these sites. The real amount is likely higher, as this was just one of several payment processors the websites have used.
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Dorocron LLP did not respond to multiple requests for comment via email, and calls to the number listed on sites that had the company’s details in their legal information sections went unanswered.
Resan is the only person who appears to have been publicly associated with Dorocron LLP, and he is also the sole director of a UK-registered company, Facitic Ltd, that registered the domain of RefacePorn. Resan did not respond to multiple requests for comment sent via email over the past two weeks. Multiple emails and phone calls to Facitic Ltd also went unanswered.
However, days after we first reached out to Resan, his LinkedIn and X profiles were deleted, and his previously public Facebook profile was either deleted or made private. Both RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn also became inaccessible, displaying an error message that said “this site can’t be reached”.
Archives of RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn, which were previously available on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, have also now been excluded from the archive. The Internet Archive told Bellingcat it processed exclusion requests submitted by someone with rights to both sites on Dec. 5.
Like other websites Bellingcat has investigated, RefacePorn’s ownership was hidden behind a network of website domains, fake websites used to redirect payments, and international business registries.
Using the tool DNSlytics, we examined the Google tag history on RefacePorn and found a tag that was also used on DeepfakePorn, as well as a website called facitic.com.
Google Analytics tags are small pieces of unique code that developers can place in the backend of a website to track its analytics. Each code is unique to a specific user, who can use the same tag across multiple websites.
Both RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn offer tiered subscription packages with similar names and prices based on the number of deepfakes that could be generated and the level of support.
When simulating a purchase of one of these packages – without actually completing payment – on DeepfakePorn, we received a link to make a payment hosted through the domain “remakerai.me”. Similarly, a mock purchase on RefacePorn pointed us to a payment link on “airemaker.me”. Bellingcat has observed the use of redirects, which can be used to obscure payments, by other deepfake porn sites. Many payment processors, including Paypal and Stripe, have restrictions on buying or selling sexually oriented online content.
Payment processors often block payments that come from websites making deepfake pornography.
Using a redirect site hides the original site from the payment processor, making it harder to block.
Despite this, payment processors sometimes manage to block the redirect site.
But If one redirect site is blocked, the site owner can quickly switch to another redirect site that isn’t blocked.
Graphic: Galen Reich
The redirected payment links hosted on airemaker.me and remakerai.me offered several payment options including Paypal, credit cards and cryptocurrencies. Bellingcat selected the credit card option, and in both cases was emailed a link to complete the purchase on a payment platform called Peerwallet. This email included a link to the seller’s profile, Dorocron LLP.
This profile showed the funds received by the seller, which totalled more than $331,000 as of August 2025. This income was related to 16,264 sales. According to this dashboard, Dorocron LLP had been a member of Peerwallet since July 22, 2024, meaning these sales all occurred over the past year.

RefacePorn has been active since at least May 2022, according to promotional posts by an Instagram account with the username “Dorocron2323” and the account name “Hassler Mark”. Social media accounts for RefacePorn were also created on X and Facebook in May 2022.

While the transactions on Peerwallet were not broken down by domain, two were the payment redirect sites for the deepfake porn sites we investigated. Bellingcat’s review of the 21 “approved domains” listed on this profile found no evidence that payments were ever accepted through the other sites.
Short-lived, “disposable” domains are known to be used by bad actors to evade detection, presenting a moving target for payment processors and authorities. As of publication, both airemaker.me and remakerai.me are no longer accessible. But in the course of the investigation, we observed RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn’s payment links redirecting to other third-party sites, before the sites went offline.

Of the 21 domains on Dorocron LLP’s Peerwallet profile, only two were still accessible as of the end of November, with the rest either down due to expired domains or server issues, displaying generic domain parking pages, or requiring a login to view. Though almost all of the sites had their registration information redacted, Resan was listed as the most recent registrant for one of the expired domains.
The two sites still accessible listed a variety of products, including eBooks and digital products. Both had almost identical products and templates, and listed Dorocron LLP under their company information in their footers.
Bellingcat tried to check out items on each of the sites, and in both cases was prompted to log in. It was, however, impossible to register an account, and when we tried with an active email address we were redirected to a login page saying that the email address was “unknown”.
Archived screengrabs of some of the sites that now have expired domains or require a login to view showed that many of them followed the same format, selling eBooks and video courses with “resell rights”.
Peerwallet told Bellingcat in September that Dorocron LLP was “not approved” to sell deepfake porn, and that it was looking into the issue. However, when Bellingcat asked for an update in November, Peerwallet appeared to have closed down. Emails to the payment processor’s founder have also gone unanswered.
Dorocron LLP was registered in British Columbia, Canada in March 2022. We were unable to verify if Resan’s name was on the corporate records as information on company owners or directors in British Columbia is restricted to law enforcement and other officials.
However, Resan’s name has been used to register at least 13 sites alongside an email bearing Dorocron’s name from as far back as 2013, nine years before Dorocron was registered in Canada. The earliest domain registration, from 2013, included the name of a now-dissolved UK-registered company called “Webnaser LTD”, whose registration documents also cite Resan as the sole director.
A leak found on data breach site Intelx.io shows that an almost identical password (with different capitalisation of some letters) was used to log into this “dorocron” Gmail account and a Netflix account associated with Resan’s personal email address. This password was also used to log into web domain registry GoDaddy using RefacePorn’s support email address.
Leaked passwords on Intelx.io revealed another link between Resan and DeepfakePorn: an email with the username “resanmark” was used to log into DeepfakePorn’s website, with a password containing his birth year. In all, we found four unique passwords that were reused between Resan’s personal emails, the Dorocron emails, and a support email for RefacePorn. These four passwords include either Resan’s name or the date or year of his birth.
Resan also posted two job listings from his now-deleted LinkedIn account about a year ago, for a full-stack web developer and a WordPress developer at Dorocron LLP. In the web developer listing, he described the company as “developing and applying revolutionary AI technologies” and said the job would have “high wages”. We could not find any other individual with a public association to Dorocron LLP on LinkedIn or elsewhere.

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Aside from his links to Dorocron LLP, Resan is also the sole director and person with significant control of Facitic Ltd, a UK-registered company which was listed as the registrant for RefacePorn.
Using DomainTools, we were able to see the historical registrant information in a WHOIS lookup of the site’s domain registration. When we checked this in August 2025, we were able to see that, as of June 2025, Facitic Ltd was the registered owner of RefacePorn. This information was later redacted – as it is for other sites linked to Resan such as DeepfakePorn.
ICANN, which regulates websites, requires domain name providers to verify the accuracy of their customers’ details, including the registrant's name and contact details. Such details are publicly visible by default, but can be anonymised using paid privacy services.
The UK registration for Facitic Ltd lists Resan’s country of residence as Dubai, while the registration for another UK company he registered – which was also listed as the owner of some of the now-expired approved domains on Dorocron LLP’s Peerwallet profile – states that he resides in Cyprus. Meanwhile, Resan’s social media accounts stated that he lives in Hungary. On Peerwallet’s dashboard, the primary user of Dorocron is listed as being based in Hungary.
It is unclear if Resan actually holds positions in any of the six companies he listed himself as working at on his Facebook and LinkedIn profiles. Bellingcat has reached out to these companies to check, but has not received any replies as of publication.
Some of the connections Bellingcat found between RefacePorn and Mark Resan:

On Nov. 10, 2025, a few weeks before we contacted him, Resan applied for Facitic Ltd to be struck off the UK companies register. Based on Resan’s filings, Facitic Ltd was incorporated with an initial capital of £100 in January 2024, and there has been no recorded change in its accounts since.
This comes as UK regulator Ofcom cracks down on websites associated with UK businesses offering AI-powered nudify services. On Oct. 23, Ofcom imposed a £50,000 fine on UK-registered company Itai Tech Ltd, which has been linked to some of the biggest deepfake pornography sites in the world, for failing to prevent children from accessing pornographic content.
It is unclear what triggered Resan to file to dissolve the company, and he did not respond to Bellingcat’s query about this.
The websites linked to Resan are not among the largest in the deepfake porn industry. A similar but much larger site that Bellingcat has investigated, MrDeepFakes, received millions of visits each month. Bellingcat and its partners Tjekdet, Politiken and CBC exposed the site’s key administrator David Do in May, with MrDeepFakes going offline after we reached out to Do for comment.
In comparison, RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn received about 91,000 and 154,000 visits in October, according to digital marketing platform SemRush. But their smaller size does not mean they can’t cause significant harm.
Mantzarlis, of the news site Indicator, said there were “smaller players” taking bigger risks around regulation, such as “Crush AI”, a group of Chinese-owned apps that bypassed Meta’s moderation rules to run 25,000 ads on Facebook and Instagram before the social media giant sued them.
“These smaller players are often the ones that are more actively trying to stand out on social media to catch up with the bigger ones,” Mantzarlis said.
In the course of our investigation, we ran tests using the free features on RefacePorn to determine if there were any restrictions on images that could be uploaded on the website.
Without actually generating the content, we uploaded AI-generated images of adult women and underage girls. Unlike on other websites we have tested, which have added the bare minimum of checks to prevent uploading images depicting children, there was no restriction or evidence of age-related safeguards on RefacePorn.
While there aren’t laws in Hungary explicitly prohibiting deepfake porn, the possession, creation and distribution of sexually explicit images of minors is illegal.
“As the more established websites come under sustained regulatory pressure and others get litigated into oblivion, the minnows are ready to try and capture market share,” Mantzarlis said.
And while some sites such as RefacePorn and DeepfakePorn may fold in the face of public scrutiny, others continue to operate, unchecked and easily accessible, online.
“These websites are eminently replaceable and there's no reason to believe that there is any form of ‘brand loyalty’,” Mantzarlis said. “Perpetrators are going to search for ‘nudify’ or click on an ad and go to whatever tool does the job.”
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Melissa Zhu contributed to this report.
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