Ireland DPC Launches Probe into X After Grok AI Linked to Explicit Image Generation.
The Data Protection Commission (DPC) of Ireland has officially launched an investigation into X (formerly Twitter) to determine whether the platform has violated European Union privacy laws. The probe centers on Grok AI, X's proprietary artificial intelligence, following reports that users can prompt the system to generate explicit imagery, including non-consensual deepfakes and illegal content involving minors.
The Legal Escalation
The DPC confirmed that it served formal notice of the investigation to XIUC, X's European subsidiary registered in Ireland, on February 16, 2026. This move marks a significant escalation in the EU's scrutiny of AI safety and content moderation.
This isn't the only legal hurdle for X. Just recently, French authorities conducted a raid on X's Paris headquarters regarding similar allegations of Grok’s capability to produce "highly inappropriate" content. In response, X has dismissed the claims, characterizing the regulatory actions as "excessive" and an overreach of authority.
- Grok AI is marketed as a "rebellious" AI with fewer restrictions than competitors like ChatGPT or Claude. However, this freedom has become a double-edged sword, as guardrails fail to distinguish between satire and the creation of illegal and human rights-violating content.
- Under Europe's Digital Services Act (DSA), very large platforms (VLOPs) are obligated to mitigate systemic risk. If it can be proven that X allowed Grok to create child pornography, the company could face fines of up to 6% of its total global revenue.
- By 2026, the issue of AI-generated non-consensual imagery will become a global agenda. Many countries are rushing to enact laws known as "Right to Physical and Digital Integrity" to protect individuals from having their faces used in pornography.
- Analysts believe that the fact that French authorities have gone to such lengths... The "running of offices" reflects the government agency's loss of confidence in X's internal audit processes and its desire to access "source code" or "training data" to verify that X has implemented adequate security filters.
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Source: DPC

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