xAI, Grok and Elon Musk
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WASHINGTON – Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said Wednesday many of the deepfake porn images being generated by Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok are unacceptable violations of the law he authored and fought to get enacted last year.
Grok, X's AI chatbot, generates about 6,700 sexually suggestive images per hour — roughly 85 times more than the five largest alternative platforms combined. Victims report their complaints are dismissed by X's moderation system.
Paid tools that “strip” clothes from photos have been available on the darker corners of the internet for years. Elon Musk’s X is now removing barriers to entry—and making the results public.
Image-based sexual abuse is a concerning and growing problem. While anyone can be victimized, 90% of victims of image-based sexual abuse are women.
Grok's continued posting of nonconsensual images on X highlights a key unsettled legal issue around artificial intelligence: just who — if anyone — is liable for harm caused by a chatbot's outputs. Why it matters: Businesses,
In response to the Grok "remove clothes" trend, X said it would remove illegal content and ban users generating it with the AI tool.
OnlyFans star Sophie Rain is hardly a stranger to staying in the conversation, and she has done it again by jumping into the trend of Grok removing clothes on prompt. Rain seemed to jump onto the bandwagon of this concerning trend by asking the AI to remove her bodysuit while sharing an older picture of
Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok is facing backlash after it generated sexualized images of children, raising serious questions about content safeguards as watchdogs report a sharp rise in AI-enabled abuse.
The United Kingdom’s regulatory authority for the communication industry in the country said it has made “urgent contact” with Elon Musk’s social media company over Grok creating images