Elon Musk’s X restricts Grok photo editing amid concerns about sexualised images
- by Independent
- Jan 15, 2026
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Elon Musk has backed down in the row over the creation of deepfake images using his AI tool Grok, restricting the chatbot from creating sexualised images in places where it is illegal.
The use of Grok â an AI tool embedded into the social media platform X (Twitter) â to create sexually explicit content, including child sexual abuse, has prompted a wave of concern among ministers, with Ofcom earlier this week announcing an investigation into claims the tool was being used to digitally undress people.
The UK also said it would bring into force a law making the creation of non-consensual sexual images illegal after the row, in which Mr Musk claimed the British government was âfascistâ and trying to curb free speech.
In a post on X on Wednesday, the company said it had imposed restrictions on âediting of images of real people in revealing clothing such as bikinisâ.
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The X owner initially claimed the British government was âfascistâ and trying to curb free speech by restricting the chatbot
(AFP/Getty)
âThis 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,â the company said.
âWe now geoblock the ability of all users to generate images of real people in bikinis, underwear, and similar attire via the Grok account and in Grok in X in those jurisdictions where itâs illegal.â
The climbdown is a rare victory for Sir Keir Starmer, who was piling pressure on the tech billionaire to take action over the row.
The restriction will apply to all users, including paid subscribers, while image editing and creation will be limited to premium users.
Mr Musk claimed that his chatbot would refuse to produce illegal content and appeared to blame âadversarial hackingâ for its generation of sexualised images.
With Not Safe for Work (NSFW) settings switched on, he said in an X post on Wednesday that the chatbot is âsupposed to allow upper body nudity of imaginary adult humans (not real ones) consistent with what can be seen in R-rated movies on Apple TVâ.
âThat is the de facto standard in America. This will vary in other regions according to the laws on a country by country basis,â he wrote on Wednesday night.
The announcement came after Sir Keir said he âwonât back downâ in his fight with Mr Musk over the creation of deepfakes â but welcomed reports that X had taken action to comply with the law.
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