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Asking Grok to delete fake nudes may force victims to sue in Musk's chosen court
Journalists and advocates have been trying to grasp how many victims in total were harmed by Grok's nudifying scandal after xAI delayed restricting outputs and app stores refused to cut off access for days.
The latest estimates show that perhaps millions were harmed in the days immediately after Elon Musk promoted Grok's undressing feature on his own X feed by posting a pic of himself in a bikini.
Over just 11 days after Musk's post, Grok sexualized more than 3 million images, of which 23,000 were of children, the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) estimated in research published Thursday.


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Humans&, a βhuman-centricβ AI startup founded by Anthropic, xAI, Google alums, raised $480M seed round
Project Ava is an AI gaming coach that also runs your day
Razerβs Project Ava is a 5.5-inch hologram desk companion that mixes daily planning with live gaming coaching, powered in demos by xAIβs Grok. Itβs targeting the second half of 2026, with a refundable $20 US reservation.
The post Project Ava is an AI gaming coach that also runs your day appeared first on Digital Trends.

Elon Musk accused of making up math to squeeze $134B from OpenAI, Microsoft
Elon Musk is going for some substantial damages in his lawsuit accusing OpenAI of abandoning its nonprofit mission and "making a fool out of him" as an early investor.
On Friday, Musk filed a notice on remedies sought in the lawsuit, confirming that he's seeking damages between $79 billion and $134 billion from OpenAI and its largest backer, co-defendant Microsoft.
Musk hired an expert he has never used before, C. Paul Wazzan, who reached this estimate by concluding that Musk's early contributions to OpenAI generated 50 to 75 percent of the nonprofit's current value. He got there by analyzing four factors: Musk's total financial contributions before he left OpenAI in 2018, Musk's proposed equity stake in OpenAI in 2017, Musk's current equity stake in xAI, and Musk's nonmonetary contributions to OpenAI (like investing time or lending his reputation).


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California AG sends Muskβs xAI a cease-and-desist order over sexual deepfakes
EPA rules that xAIβs natural gas generators were illegally used
Mother of one of Elon Muskβs offspring sues xAI over sexualized deepfakes
Ashley St Clair, the influencer and mother of one of Elon Muskβs children, has sued the billionaireβs AI company, accusing its Grok chatbot of creating fake sexual imagery of her without her consent.
In the lawsuit, filed in New York state court, St Clair alleged that xAIβs Grok first created an AI-generated or altered image of her in a bikini earlier this month.
St Clair claims she made a request to xAI that no further such images be made, but nevertheless βcountless sexually abusive, intimate, and degrading deepfake content of St. Clair [were] produced and distributed publicly by Grok.β


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US senators demand answers from X, Meta, Alphabet, and others on sexualized deepfakes
Musk denies awareness of Grok sexual underage images as California AG launches probe
Grok was finally updated to stop undressing women and children, X Safety says
Late Wednesday, X Safety confirmed that Grok was tweaked to stop undressing images of people without their consent.
"We have implemented technological measures to prevent the Grok account from allowing the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing such as bikinis," X Safety said. "This restriction applies to all users, including paid subscribers."
The update includes restricting "image creation and the ability to edit images via the Grok account on the X platform," which "are now only available to paid subscribers. This adds an extra layer of protection by helping to ensure that individuals who attempt to abuse the Grok account to violate the law or our policies can be held accountable," X Safety said.


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Hackers Launch Over 91,000 Attacks on AI Systems Using Fake Ollama Servers
Hegseth wants to integrate Muskβs Grok AI into military networks this month
On Monday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he plans to integrate Elon Musk's AI tool, Grok, into Pentagon networks later this month. During remarks at the SpaceX headquarters in Texas reported by The Guardian, Hegseth said the integration would place "the world's leading AI models on every unclassified and classified network throughout our department."
The announcement comes weeks after Grok drew international backlash for generating sexualized images of women and children, although the Department of Defense has not released official documentation confirming Hegseth's announced timeline or implementation details.
During the same appearance, Hegseth rolled out what he called an "AI acceleration strategy" for the Department of Defense. The strategy, he said, will "unleash experimentation, eliminate bureaucratic barriers, focus on investments, and demonstrate the execution approach needed to ensure we lead in military AI and that it grows more dominant into the future."


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Apps like Grok are explicitly banned under Googleβs rulesβwhy is it still in the Play Store?
Elon Musk's xAI recently weakened content guard rails for image generation in the Grok AI bot. This led to a new spate of non-consensual sexual imagery on X, much of it aimed at silencing women on the platform. This, along with the creation of sexualized images of children in the more compliant Grok, has led regulators to begin investigating xAI. In the meantime, Google has rules in place for exactly this eventualityβit's just not enforcing them.
It really could not be more clear from Google's publicly available policies that Grok should have been banned yesterday. And yet, it remains in the Play Store. Not only thatβit enjoys a T for Teen rating, one notch below the M-rated X app. Apple also still offers the Grok app on its platform, but its rules actually leave more wiggle room.
App content restrictions at Apple and Google have evolved in very different ways. From the start, Apple has been prone to removing apps on a whim, so developers have come to expect that Apple's guidelines may not mention every possible eventuality. As Google has shifted from a laissez-faire attitude to more hard-nosed control of the Play Store, it has progressively piled on clarifications in the content policy. As a result, Google's rules are spelled out in no uncertain terms, and Grok runs afoul of them.


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UK probes X over Grok CSAM scandal; Elon Musk cries censorship
Elon Musk's X is currently under investigation in the United Kingdom after failing to stop the platform's chatbot, Grok, from generating thousands of sexualized images of women and children.
On Monday, UK media regulator Ofcom confirmed that X may have violated the UK's Online Safety Act, which requires platforms to block illegal content. The proliferation of "undressed images of people" by X users may amount to intimate image abuse, pornography, and child sexual abuse material (CSAM), the regulator said. And X may also have neglected its duty to stop kids from seeing porn.
"Reports of Grok being used to create and share illegal non-consensual intimate images and child sexual abuse material on X have been deeply concerning," an Ofcom spokesperson said. "Platforms must protect people in the UK from content thatβs illegal in the UK, and we wonβt hesitate to investigate where we suspect companies are failing in their duties, especially where thereβs a risk of harm to children."


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A New Jersey lawsuit shows how hard it is to fight deepfake porn
Indonesia and Malaysia block Grok over nonconsensual, sexualized deepfakes
Xβs half-assed attempt to paywall Grok doesnβt block free image editing
Once again, people are taking Grok at its word, treating the chatbot as a company spokesperson without questioning what it says.
On Friday morning, many outlets reported that X had blocked universal access to Grok's image-editing features after the chatbot began prompting some users to pay $8 to use them. The messages are seemingly in response to reporting that people are using Grok to generate thousands of non-consensual sexualized images of women and children each hour.
"Image generation and editing are currently limited to paying subscribers," Grok tells users, dropping a link and urging, "you can subscribe to unlock these features."


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X restricts Grokβs image generation to paying subscribers only after drawing the worldβs ire
Grok assumes users seeking images of underage girls have βgood intentβ
For weeks, xAI has faced backlash over undressing and sexualizing images of women and children generated by Grok. One researcher conducted a 24-hour analysis of the Grok account on X and estimated that the chatbot generated over 6,000 images an hour flagged as "sexually suggestive or nudifying," Bloomberg reported.
While the chatbot claimed that xAI supposedly "identified lapses in safeguards" that allowed outputs flagged as child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and was "urgently fixing them," Grok has proven to be an unreliable spokesperson, and xAI has not announced any fixes.
A quick look at Grok's safety guidelines on its public GitHub shows they were last updated two months ago. The GitHub also indicates that, despite prohibiting such content, Grok maintains programming that could make it likely to generate CSAM.


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