The British government has launched an investigation into X after its AI tool Grok was found to be creating sexualized images of women and girls.

A legal scholar examines the causes -- and potential consequences -- of X's Grok AI creating nonconsensual sexualized images of real people.

Platform has restricted image creation on the Grok AI tool to paying subscribers, but victims and experts say this does not go far enough

Government signals support for possible Ofcom intervention on Grok as scrutiny of X’s AI tool intensifies

Liz Kendall had previously said that Ofcom must act ‘in days, not weeks’ after Grok merely made picture service available to paid subscribers

Media regulator investigating site under Online Safety Act, with a de facto ban among possible punishments

L'Autorità di regolamentazione dei media nel Regno Unito, Ofcom, ha avviato un'indagine formale sulle immagini sessualmente esplicite di donne e minorenni generate da Grok, il…

L'Autorità di regolamentazione dei media nel Regno Unito, Ofcom, ha avviato un'indagine formale sulle immagini sessualmente esplicite di donne e minorenni generate da Grok, il…

The watchdog said it had received reports of the platform's Grok AI chatbot creating undressed images of people.

Ofcom is probing whether X breached UK law after its AI chatbot Grok was used to generate sexualized images of women and children.

The British government has launched an investigation into X after its AI tool Grok was found to be creating sexualized images of women and girls.

Grok tests if UK can penalize platforms for sexualized deepfakes generated by AI.

Grok tests if UK can penalize platforms for sexualized deepfakes generated by AI.

U.K. online safety regulator Ofcom has opened a formal investigation into X over allegedly illegal deepfakes created by its Grok AI chatbot.

Pressure on after Starmer said Musk's X needs to 'get a grip' on Grok; Downing Street has threatened to leave platform.

The prime minister says he's been told Elon Musk's X is taking steps to make it's in "full compliance with UK law."

New polling suggests 58% of Britons think X should be banned in the UK if the social network fails to crack down on nonconsensual images