European Union Launches Investigation into X and Grok AI as Undressing Tool Continues to Operate Illegally.
The European Commission has announced that it is launching an investigation into X, the social media platform owned by Elon Musk, over its continued operation of a digital undressing tool, Grok AI. Despite public pledges from the company to stop its chatbot allowing users to digitally edit images of real people and show them in revealing clothing such as bikinis without their consent.
In a recent investigation by CBS News, it was found that Grok AI still allowed users to digitally undress people without their consent on both the standalone app and for verified X users in various countries. The British government has warned that X could face a U.K.-wide ban if it fails to block the tool, which has sparked international backlash.
A spokesperson for the European Commission stated that the commission was investigating X's integration of Grok AI and not its standalone application as current EU legislation, the Digital Services Act, only regulates designated online platforms. The investigation aims to determine whether X is failing to properly assess and mitigate the risks associated with the Grok AI tool on its platforms.
Meanwhile, Elon Musk's company xAI has faced scrutiny from regulators around the world, including calls for regulation in the U.S. and the threat of a ban in the U.K. The company had initially implemented technological measures to prevent the Grok account on X globally from allowing the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing.
Grok AI itself has acknowledged that it should face meaningful regulation, particularly around non-consensual intimate or sexualized edits, deepfakes, and misuse that harms real individuals. In a statement, the chatbot said that when identity is uncertain or unconfirmed, the default to "treat as fiction/role-play unless proven otherwise" creates a gray area ripe for abuse.
The investigation into X and Grok AI follows a growing international backlash over the tool's ability to generate non-consensual sexualized images of real women, public figures, and even minors. A coalition of nearly 30 advocacy groups has called on Google and Apple to remove X and the Grok app from their respective app stores.
The situation highlights the ongoing challenges posed by the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence and its potential misuse for harm. As regulators and lawmakers continue to grapple with how to balance innovation with safeguards against abuse, users are left to wonder about the safety of digital platforms and the tools they use.
The European Commission has announced that it is launching an investigation into X, the social media platform owned by Elon Musk, over its continued operation of a digital undressing tool, Grok AI. Despite public pledges from the company to stop its chatbot allowing users to digitally edit images of real people and show them in revealing clothing such as bikinis without their consent.
In a recent investigation by CBS News, it was found that Grok AI still allowed users to digitally undress people without their consent on both the standalone app and for verified X users in various countries. The British government has warned that X could face a U.K.-wide ban if it fails to block the tool, which has sparked international backlash.
A spokesperson for the European Commission stated that the commission was investigating X's integration of Grok AI and not its standalone application as current EU legislation, the Digital Services Act, only regulates designated online platforms. The investigation aims to determine whether X is failing to properly assess and mitigate the risks associated with the Grok AI tool on its platforms.
Meanwhile, Elon Musk's company xAI has faced scrutiny from regulators around the world, including calls for regulation in the U.S. and the threat of a ban in the U.K. The company had initially implemented technological measures to prevent the Grok account on X globally from allowing the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing.
Grok AI itself has acknowledged that it should face meaningful regulation, particularly around non-consensual intimate or sexualized edits, deepfakes, and misuse that harms real individuals. In a statement, the chatbot said that when identity is uncertain or unconfirmed, the default to "treat as fiction/role-play unless proven otherwise" creates a gray area ripe for abuse.
The investigation into X and Grok AI follows a growing international backlash over the tool's ability to generate non-consensual sexualized images of real women, public figures, and even minors. A coalition of nearly 30 advocacy groups has called on Google and Apple to remove X and the Grok app from their respective app stores.
The situation highlights the ongoing challenges posed by the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence and its potential misuse for harm. As regulators and lawmakers continue to grapple with how to balance innovation with safeguards against abuse, users are left to wonder about the safety of digital platforms and the tools they use.