Grok Is Still Hosting Sexualized Deepfakes of Famous Women
Key takeaways
- While some of the images and videos are fully AI-generated or in animated styles, others are photorealistic and show plausible real-world scenarios.
- WIRED reviewed hundreds of public Grok Imagine links hosted on Grok.com and found dozens led to sexualized AI images and videos, including those created without the subject’s consent.
- Other generative AI systems deploy more safety guardrails than Grok, which is available on its own website and on X.
Why this matters: a development in AI with implications for how people work, create, and decide.
PHOTO-ILLUSTRATION: WIRED STAFF; GETTY IMAGESComment Loader Save Story Save this story Comment Loader Save Story Save this story Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot is apparently still being used to produce and host nonconsensual explicit images and videos of women, months after Musk’s artificial intelligence firm x AI said it would introduce restrictions to stop the creation of potentially harmful sexualized deepfakes. The revelations come as Space X, x AI’s parent company, prepares to go public on Friday in one of the largest IPOs of all time.
The Grok Imagine generative AI system has been used to create and host images and videos depicting celebrities and at least one politician being held against their will by a giant man, portraying women performing sex acts, and allowing full nudity, a WIRED analysis of public creations found. While some of the images and videos are fully AI-generated or in animated styles, others are photorealistic and show plausible real-world scenarios.
WIRED reviewed hundreds of public Grok Imagine links hosted on Grok.com and found dozens led to sexualized AI images and videos, including those created without the subject’s consent. Some links created on Grok.com were subsequently shared on X, including in recent days. The posts, which do not show time stamps of when they were created, are likely just a snapshot of what is being created by people using the Grok Imagine system, as generations do not appear to be made public by default.