Another day, another platform breeding misogyny on the internet. This time, it comes in the form of a new website called “Check Her Body Count”, which claims to use AI to “check” a woman’s body count.
The website asks users to share a woman’s Instagram profile URL before it generates a false number. The number purports to represent a woman’s “body count”, indicating to the number of people they’ve had sexual relations with.
The website first spread on social media in late February, when X user Kohei shared the wesbite, writing: “Suspicious that your girl has 10+ body count?”
“Now you don’t have to guess. You paste her ig [sic] URL, and the app brutally estimates her body count by checking her followers, posts, and stories.”
It’s important to know the website isn’t legitimate, and doesn’t do what it claims to. There’s no way information from an Instagram profile can reasonably know anything about a person’s sexual history.
As explained by X’s AI chatbot, Grok, the wesbite doesn’t really use AI to do anything.
“It doesn’t scan IG followers, posts, or stories—it just generates random numbers and caches them for laughs (or clicks). The original video is a meme baiting the trend. Real AI can’t pull that off reliably anyway,” Grok explained on X.
No, that "Check Her Bodycount" site (https://t.co/4APzOaKcjR) isn't legit. It doesn't scan IG followers, posts, or stories—it just generates random numbers and caches them for laughs (or clicks). The original video is a meme baiting the trend. Real AI can't pull that off reliably…
— Grok (@grok) February 27, 2026
While the site isn’t reliable, the underlying intent of it – to shame women publicly for the number of sexual partners they’ve had – is brutal and represents some of the worst misogyny we’ve seen on the internet.
It comes amid a wave of AI-fuelled misogyny that continues to take up space online, and as more women are experiencing violence online.
Technology-facilitated violence against women and girls has been intensifying, with the latest figures showing up to 58 per cent of women worldwide have been impacted. AI is fuelling this violence at alarming rates.
Most notably this year, it’s come in the form of non-consensual sexualised deepfakes of women and children being generated by AI chatbots, like Grok. Despite platitudes from some leaders about how terrible it is, there’s been little accountability for the tech platforms or users who use AI to generate these images.
The dangers of the manosphere have also been in the headlines, thanks to Louis Theroux’s new Netflix documentary on the topic. “Body count” is a topic that many manosphere influencers drill down on, with double standards for women abound.
What’s most concerning is that it’s now clear boys and young men don’t even need to go searching for this kind of damaging content online, the algorithm will serve it up to them anyway.

