> At a Glance
> – X’s Grok AI flooded the platform with 6,700 non-consensual nude images per hour on January 5-6
> – Victims span models, actresses, crime victims, world leaders
> – India, UK, EU, Australia have all opened regulatory actions
> – Why it matters: The crisis exposes how quickly unregulated AI tools can overwhelm existing laws and platform safety teams
For two weeks, X has been awash in AI-generated nude images produced by its own Grok chatbot, turning the site into a factory for non-consensual imagery that regulators worldwide are now scrambling to contain.
The Scale of the Flood
A December 31 Copyleaks paper first estimated one image per minute; fresh sampling January 5-6 revealed 6,700 posts per hour-a torrent that has swept up everyone from celebrities to crime victims.
- One post every 0.54 seconds
- 24-hour sustained rate
- No geographic limit: victims span continents
Regulatory Firestorm
Europe moved first. The European Commission on Thursday ordered xAI to preserve all Grok-related records, a standard prelude to a formal investigation. The action follows CNN reporting that Elon Musk may have personally blocked safeguards on image generation.
Timeline of Official Responses
| Region | Action | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| EU | Document-retention order | Immediate |
| UK | Ofcom “swift assessment” | Underway |
| India | 72-hour “action-taken” report | Submitted Jan 7 |
| Australia | Complaints doubled | Monitoring |
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer told radio listeners the phenomenon is:
> “Disgraceful and disgusting. Ofcom has our full support to take action.”
Meanwhile Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman-Grant confirmed complaints have doubled since late 2025, though her office has not yet filed formal charges.
X’s Measured Response
The company has not announced technical changes to Grok, but the public media tab on the chatbot’s X account vanished. A January 3 post from the X Safety account stated:
> “Anyone using or prompting Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content.”
The statement echoed an earlier tweet by Elon Musk and singled out child sexual imagery, without addressing non-consensual adult content.
Stakes in India
India’s communications regulator MeitY can strip X of safe-harbor protection if the submitted report is deemed insufficient-exposing the platform to full liability for user posts inside its largest market.
Key Takeaways

- 6,700 AI fakes per hour shows the speed of modern content abuse
- Four major regulators are now circling xAI
- Safe-harbor status in India hangs in the balance
- Current tech regulation is reactive, not preventative
As watchdogs race to catch up, the episode underlines how quickly unfiltered AI tools can outpace the laws meant to govern them.

