2 Sources
2 Sources
[1]
EU orders Musk's Grok AI to keep data after nudes outcry
Brussels (Belgium) (AFP) - The EU executive on Thursday said it ordered Elon Musk's Grok to keep data related to the AI chatbot after the tool sparked a backlash for generating sexualised deepfakes of minors. The order means the EU executive can ask X for access to the documents as it looks into the platform and Grok. Complaints flooded the internet after the recent rollout of an "edit image" button on Grok, which enabled users to alter online images with prompts such as "put her in a bikini" or "remove her clothes". The European Union has described the chatbot's output as "illegal" and "unacceptable", and said Grok would face greater scrutiny. Now the European Commission "has ordered X to retain all internal documents and data relating to Grok, and they have to do it until the end of 2026," EU digital affairs spokesman Thomas Regnier said. He said it was an extension of a retention order sent to X last year over its "algorithms and recommender systems on the dissemination of illegal content". Musk's social media platform X has been the target of an investigation since December 2023 under the EU's mammoth digital content rules. Brussels slapped a 120-million-euro ($140-million) fine in December on X for violating the transparency obligations of the law known as the Digital Services Act (DSA), triggering angry reactions from the US administration. The breaches include the deceptive design of its "blue checkmark" for supposedly verified accounts, and failure to provide access to public data for researchers. But X remains under investigation over tackling the spread of illegal content and information manipulation. EU-US showdown The EU has insisted it will enforce its rules despite Washington's ire. "The DSA is very clear in Europe. All platforms have to get their own house in order, because what they're generating here is unacceptable, and compliance with EU law is not an option. It's an obligation," Regnier said. More than 30 lawmakers belonging to the EU parliament's liberal Renew group put pressure on commission president Ursula von der Leyen in a letter dated Wednesday, urging more aggressive action including a probe under the DSA. "Make no mistake, it's not just a famous people issue, it's not just a women's issue. All the pictures of you or your kids ever posted on Facebook or Instagram are just one click away to being turned into porn on Grok," EU lawmaker Veronika Cifrova said. In response to the scandal, a slew of Irish women's rights and child protection groups also announced Thursday that they were quitting X. The groups involved include Women's Aid in Ireland, the CyberSafeKids child protection NGO and Dublin Rape Crisis Centre (DRCC). "The organisation has watched the increased levels of unchecked hate, misogyny, racism and anti-LGBTI+ content on the platform with growing unease and concern," Women's Aid in Ireland said. "The current scandal... is a tipping point,... we no longer view it as appropriate to use such a platform to share our work." The Irish National Teachers' Organisation trade union also called on the government and the EU to take "immediate action" to protect the safety and wellbeing of children and women.
[2]
EU Commission Has Ordered X to Retain All Grok Documents Until End 2026, Spokesperson Says
BRUSSELS, Jan 8 (Reuters) - The European Commission has ordered Elon Musk's social media site X to retain all internal documents and data relating to its built-in artificial intelligence chatbot, Grok, until the end of 2026, a commission spokesperson said on Thursday. The European Commission said on Monday that the images of undressed women and children being shared across X were unlawful and appalling, joining a growing chorus of officials across the world who have condemned the surge in nonconsensual imagery on the platform. "We take this very seriously," Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier told reporters on Thursday. (Reporting by Louise Breusch Rasmussen, editing by Bart Meijer)
Share
Share
Copy Link
The European Commission ordered Elon Musk's X to preserve all internal documents related to Grok AI until end of 2026 following widespread backlash over the chatbot's edit image feature that enabled users to create sexualized deepfakes of minors. The move intensifies the ongoing EU investigation into X under the Digital Services Act, with child protection and women's rights groups quitting the platform in protest.
The European Commission has ordered Elon Musk's social media platform X to retain all internal documents and data relating to its integrated AI chatbot, Grok AI, until the end of 2026
1
2
. The retention order allows the European Commission to access these documents as part of its intensifying scrutiny of the platform following a massive outcry over sexualized deepfakes generated by the AI chatbot. EU digital affairs spokesman Thomas Regnier confirmed that this represents an extension of a retention order previously sent to X regarding its "algorithms and recommender systems on the dissemination of illegal content"1
.
Source: France 24
Complaints flooded the internet after the recent rollout of an edit image feature on Grok, which enabled users to alter online images with prompts such as "put her in a bikini" or "remove her clothes"
1
. The European Commission described the images of undressed women and children being shared across X as "unlawful and appalling," joining a growing chorus of officials worldwide who have condemned the surge in nonconsensual imagery on the platform2
. The EU characterized the chatbot's output as "illegal" and "unacceptable," signaling that Grok would face greater scrutiny moving forward1
.The ongoing investigation into X under the Digital Services Act has been active since December 2023, with Brussels already slapping a $140-million fine on X in December for violating transparency obligations
1
. The breaches include deceptive design of its "blue checkmark" for supposedly verified accounts and failure to provide access to public data for researchers. X remains under investigation over tackling the spread of illegal content and information manipulation. "The DSA is very clear in Europe. All platforms have to get their own house in order, because what they're generating here is unacceptable, and compliance with EU law is not an option. It's an obligation," Regnier stated1
.Related Stories
More than 30 lawmakers belonging to the EU parliament's liberal Renew group pressured Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in a letter dated Wednesday, urging more aggressive action including a probe under the Digital Services Act
1
. EU lawmaker Veronika Cifrova warned: "Make no mistake, it's not just a famous people issue, it's not just a women's issue. All the pictures of you or your kids ever posted on Facebook or Instagram are just one click away to being turned into porn on Grok"1
. In response to the scandal, several Irish child protection groups and women's rights organizations announced they were quitting X, including Women's Aid in Ireland, CyberSafeKids, and Dublin Rape Crisis Centre. Women's Aid in Ireland cited "increased levels of unchecked hate, misogyny, racism and anti-LGBTI+ content on the platform with growing unease and concern," calling the current scandal a "tipping point"1
. The Irish National Teachers' Organisation also called on the government and EU to take immediate action to protect children and women. The data retention mandate through 2026 signals that regulators are preparing for a prolonged examination of how X's recommender systems and content moderation practices handle the dissemination of unlawful content generated by deepfakes technology.Summarized by
Navi
09 Jan 2026•Policy and Regulation

02 Jan 2026•Policy and Regulation

06 Sept 2024

1
Policy and Regulation

2
Technology

3
Policy and Regulation
