Get your news delivered straight to you by 7am - sign up to our new Morning Mail newsletter for FREESee more Daily Mail on Google - save us as a Preferred SourceBy ED HOLT Published: 09:08 BST, 4 June 2026 | Updated: 09:18 BST, 4 June 2026

A Labour MP has launched legal action against Elon Musk's xAI company for damages saying that its Grok chatbot tool was used to create fake pictures of her in a bikini.Jess Asato, the MP for Lowestoft in Suffolk, previously said it was 'violating' to see the tech billionaire's AI chatbot used to create images of her without consent.This included not only pictures of Ms Asato wearing a bikini but also disturbing images of her being chloroformed and prepared for a sexual assault. And since she launched her legal action, Ms Asato has seen further AI-generated images of her created. In a claim submitted to the High Court, Ms Asato has accused xAI - a company owned by Musk who also owns X - of breaching laws related to data protection and the misuse of private information such as using people's images without their consent.Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Ms Asato said: 'It's important we use the available law to hold these tech companies to account. If somebody produces harm through a product like Grok then there needs to be some redress.'The MP added that she wants to win the case to show that tech companies 'cannot act without impunity' and there needs to be 'safeguards' built into their products to prevent people's images being used without their consent.She has also called on any victim who had their image manipulated by Grok to come forward. Jess Asato (pictured), the MP for Lowestoft in Suffolk, previously said it was 'violating' to see the tech billionaire's AI chatbot used to create images of her without consent Pictured: Elon Musk the owner of xAI. In a claim submitted to the High Court, Ms Asato has accused xAI the company of breaching laws related to data protection and the misuse of private information such as using people's images without their consentMs Asato's case comes after a similar lawsuit was submitted in New York by Ashley St Clair, who is the mother of one of Musk's children, who alleges explicit images were also generated of her by Grok, including one image in which she was underage.Ravi Naik, the lawyer representing Ms Asato, told The Financial Times: 'At its heart this case is about a single principle: that developers must answer for the way they design and deploy their tools.'Our case is that… an image that is of you, is designed to look like you and [whose] very purpose is to degrade you or have you represented in different conditions, must be an image of you. xAI say otherwise.'Recalling when the AI images were created, Ms Asato told Breakfast that the experience left her feeling 'dehumanised' and 'demeaned'.She said: 'As an MP I campaign on violence against women and girls and when we heard Grok was being used to create these horrific sexualised images. 'I spoke out against that and then I became a victim too.'I was by no means the worst victim affected but it made me feel dehumanised, it made me feel demeaned, it was something that made me feel like my consent had been stripped. 'In my case [Musk] reshared an image of me saying I didn't want to be put in a bikini laughing at those of us who had this happen to us.' Ms Asato's case comes after a similar lawsuit was submitted in New York by Ashley St Clair (pictured) who alleges explicit images were also generated of her by Grok, including one image in which she was underageMs Asato also revealed since she started her legal action further AI-generated images of her have been created. The UK government previously threatened legal action against X, formerly Twitter, after Grok was used to produce sexualised images of real women and in some cases children. Meanwhile, Ofcom launched a separate inquiry.X initially said it would change its rules so that only paying customers could produce such imagery - a move that was strongly condemned by Sir Keir Starmer as 'horrific'.Just days later, X U-turned and declared that Grok would be stopped from editing pictures of real people to show them in revealing clothes. The Daily Mail has approached xAI for a comment.