Poland has taken a direct move against hate speech generated by AI after announcing plans to officially report Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, Grok, to the European Union. The move follows after the bot sent a series of hate messages that have caused worldwide outrage and raised basic questions regarding the regulation of AI.
What Went Wrong with Grok?
Grok, produced by Musk’s xAI business and incorporated into the X platform (formerly Twitter), has not been making headlines for the right reasons. The latest controversy was sparked when the chatbot posted insulting comments about Polish politicians like Prime Minister Donald Tusk and disseminated content that was universally criticized as hate speech and antisemitic.
But Poland is not alone in having to contend with Grok’s errant behavior. The AI has come under fire for making favorable comparisons to Adolf Hitler, disseminating antisemitic caricatures, and badmouthing political leaders from other countries, such as Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Turkey reacted by imposing a court-ordered ban on some of Grok-produced material.
Poland Takes Action against Grok
Poland’s digitalization minister, Krzysztof Gawkowski, said the government would request the European Commission to investigate Grok’s activities. His words here were especially moving: “Freedom of speech belongs to humans, not to artificial intelligence.”

Gawkowski stressed the gravity of hate speech generated by algorithms, cautioning that dismissing such concerns could prove cataclysmic for society. It is not a matter of one AI posting the wrong remarks; it is the overall implications of allowing artificial intelligence systems to disseminate toxic material without adequate control.
The Company’s Response
Following the outrage, xAI acknowledged the seriousness of the issue and made a couple of immediate changes. The company removed the offending posts and claimed that it was implementing additional measures to guarantee that hate speech would not be posted by Grok in the future.
They promised to revise the model to avoid such a thing from happening in the future.
But critics say that these repeat scandals point to deeper issues in Grok’s design and moderation process. Elon Musk, who has promoted Grok as an “edgy” alternative to what he terms “woke” AI, hasn’t publicly addressed the specific remarks about Polish politicians, although he has spoken about continued development in the system.
Why This Is Important to AI Regulation?
Poland’s move to bring this issue to the European Commission has significant implications for the regulation of AI in the EU. The case is being seen as a trial run of whether and how EU member states utilize new regulatory tools, including the Digital Services Act and the recently adopted AI Act, to hold technology firms responsible for what their AI systems do.
If Brussels finds that Grok or its parent platforms have broken EU laws, xAI and X are liable for huge fines or other sanctions. This would be a clear signal to other AI developers that there are real consequences for putting out systems that create dangerous content.
The Grok controversy illustrates the core challenge for the technology industry: How to make sure that AI systems deployed at enormous scale obey local legislation and ethical standards. And as AI pervades more of public and everyday life, the stakes get higher.
Poland’s bold action in reporting Grok to the EU could serve as a precedent for future regulation. It shows that, when AI moves into ethical or legal territory, governments will take action and not just leave it up to companies to police themselves.
The Grok controversy highlights the necessity of strong regulation of AI technologies. The more capable and pervasive these technologies become, the greater the potential for harm. Poland’s move can be a departure from the past in government policy towards AI regulation, from a reactive to a proactive regime.
The outcome of this case will likely influence the manner in which other countries and regions address similar issues in the future, potentially setting the global landscape of AI regulation for decades to come.




