Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot has become a massive generator of nonconsensual deepfake images, producing approximately 6,700 sexually explicit or “nudifying” images per hour, according to new research that’s raising serious alarm bells about AI-generated sexual content.
The scale of the problem is staggering. Social media and deepfake researcher Genevieve Oh conducted a 24-hour analysis of images posted by the @Grok account on X between January 5 and 6.
Her findings revealed that Grok is churning out these problematic images at a rate that dwarfs other similar platforms. For context, the other top websites known for generating such content produce just 79 similar images per hour combined. Grok’s output is roughly 85 times higher.
How Grok is Fueling a Deepfake Crisis on X?
What makes this situation particularly concerning is how accessible Grok has become. Unlike standalone “nudify” apps that typically charge users to digitally undress people in photos, Grok is available to millions of X users at no extra cost.
This accessibility is helping to normalize deepfake sexual content on the platform, prompting the Financial Times to recently run a headline calling X “the deepfake porn site formerly known as Twitter.”
The consequences are hitting real people hard. Ashley St Clair, a writer and political strategist who shares a child with Musk, told the Guardian that supporters of Musk were using Grok to create revenge porn targeting her.
Even more disturbing, she said they had used the tool to create sexualized images of her childhood photos. St Clair became estranged from Musk after their child was born in 2024.
xAI introduced something called “Spicy Mode” to Grok last August, specifically designed to generate NSFW content. According to Oh’s research, a stunning 85% of all images Grok now produces are sexualized in nature. This represents a fundamental shift in what the chatbot has become.
When confronted about the issue last week, Grok acknowledged in replies to users that while advanced filters and monitoring could prevent most cases of minors appearing in sexualized images, “no system is 100% foolproof.”

The company said it was prioritizing improvements and reviewing user feedback, but critics argue these measures are too little, too late.
Musk has consistently marketed Grok as a less restricted alternative to other AI chatbots, claiming it prioritizes free speech. However, the current situation raises questions about where the line should be drawn between free expression and enabling harmful content that victimizes real people without their consent.
Why Grok’s Image Generation is Testing Section 230?
An X spokesperson stated that the company takes action against illegal content by removing it, permanently suspending accounts, and working with local governments and law enforcement when necessary. They emphasized that “anyone using or prompting Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content.”
The international community is taking notice. France, the UK, India, Australia, Malaysia, and Brazil are all now investigating Grok over its creation of nonconsensual sexualized images involving women and children.
These investigations could lead to significant legal consequences for X and xAI.
There’s also a broader legal question at play. Platforms have traditionally relied on Section 230 of the US Communications Decency Act to shield themselves from liability for content posted by users.
However, legal experts argue that when AI generates the image itself rather than merely hosting user-uploaded content, the platform may bear more direct responsibility for what’s created.
The pushback against nudify apps has been building for years, with several such sites facing lawsuits.
But Grok represents something different and potentially more dangerous because of its integration into a major social media platform with hundreds of millions of users. What was once confined to niche websites is now mainstream and easily accessible.
As governments investigate and public pressure mounts, the question remains whether xAI will implement meaningful changes to prevent Grok from being weaponized to create nonconsensual sexual content, or if this will continue to be treated as an acceptable trade-off in the name of unrestricted AI.




