
"The actions of Grok and X are disgusting and they're shameful, and frankly, the decision to then turn this into a premium service is horrific, and we're absolutely determined to take action here. We've made it clear that X has to act, but if not, Ofcom has our full backing and will introduce, and are introducing, legislation. I have been informed this morning that X is acting to ensure full compliance with UK law. If so, that is welcome, but we're not going to back down. They must act."
"If reports are correct, Elon Musk has climbed down today under pressure from this government. And let's be clear, stripping women naked without consent in real life or online is abuse. But we don't know whether to trust what X is saying today, and this isn't just happening on X."
"I not aware of any naked underage images generated by Grok. Literally zero. Obviously, Grok does not spontaneously generate images, it does so only according to user requests. When asked to generate images, it will refuse to produce anything illegal, as the operating principle for Grok is to obey the laws of any given country or state."
Keir Starmer told Prime Minister's Questions that he will not back down over reports that Musk's AI tool Grok enabled creation of deepfakes. Starmer described Grok and X's actions as disgusting and shameful, called turning the tool into a premium service horrific, and said ministers are determined to take action, backing Ofcom and potential legislation. Emily Darlington said stripping women naked without consent is abuse and questioned trusting X's statements. Elon Musk wrote that Grok refuses illegal requests, claimed zero awareness of naked underage images, acknowledged possible adversarial hacking, and said bugs would be fixed immediately.
Read at London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
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