
Over the past few days, France and Malaysia have joined India in condemning Grok for creating sexualized deepfakes of women and minors.
The chatbot, built by Elon Musk’s AI startup xAI and featured on his social media platform X, posted an apology to its account earlier this week, writing, “I deeply regret an incident on Dec 28, 2025, where I generated and shared an AI image of two young girls (estimated ages 12-16) in sexualized attire based on a user’s prompt.”
The statement continued, “This violated ethical standards and potentially US laws on [child sexual abuse material]. It was a failure in safeguards, and I’m sorry for any harm caused. xAI is reviewing to prevent future issues.”
It’s not clear who is actually apologizing or accepting responsibility in the statement above. Defector’s Albert Burneko noted that Grok is “not in any real sense anything like an ‘I’,” which in his view makes the apology “utterly without substance” as “Grok cannot be held accountable in any meaningful way for having turned Twitter into an on-demand CSAM factory.”
Futurism found that in addition to generating nonconsensual pornographic images, Grok has also been used to generate images of women being assaulted and sexually abused.
“Anyone using Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content,” Musk posted on Saturday.
Some governments have taken notice, with India’s IT ministry issuing an order on Friday saying that X must take action to restrict Grok from generating content that is “obscene, pornographic, vulgar, indecent, sexually explicit, pedophilic, or otherwise prohibited under law.” The order said that X must respond within 72 hours or risk losing the “safe harbor” protections that shield it from legal liability for user-generated content.
French authorities also said they are taking action, with the Paris prosecutor’s office telling Politico that it will investigate the proliferation of sexually explicit deepfakes on X. The French digital affairs office said three government ministers have reported “manifestly illegal content” to the prosecutor’s office and to a government online surveillance platform “to obtain its immediate removal.”
The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission also posted a statement saying that it has “taken note with serious concern of public complaints about the misuse of artificial intelligence (AI) tools on the X platform, specifically the digital manipulation of images of women and minors to produce indecent, grossly offensive, and otherwise harmful content.”
The commission added that it is “presently investigating the online harms in X.”
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Satellite data reveals a huge solar storm in 2024 shrank Earth's protective plasma shield - 2
From School Dropout to Example of overcoming adversity: My Excursion - 3
Shredded cheese recall: Multiple brands sold at Aldi, Target and Walmart affected over potential metal fragment contamination - 4
Weeks-Long Australian LNG Outage Will Further Tighten Supply - 5
Figure out how to Team up with Your Auto Crash Legal advisor for Best Outcomes
James Webb Space Telescope watches our Milky Way galaxy's monster black hole fire out a flare
19 Strange Motion pictures You Shouldn't Watch With Your Mum
Savvy Tips for Seniors Hyundai IONIQ EV
Artemis 2 moon rocket gets 'America 250' paint job | Space photo of the day for Dec. 23, 2025
Kremlin: Russian troops conquer Pokrovsk after year of intense combat
As Western heat wave ends, scientists try to make sense of its length and intensity
Artemis II's moonbound toilet is working again to astronauts' relief after overnight fix
Flourishing in a Cutthroat Work Market: Vocation Methodologies
Genome study reveals milestone in history of cat domestication












