Elon Musk continues to innovate GrokThe chatbot created by his Artificial Intelligence company xAIFrom generating sexualized pictures of women. After reports Grok is suspected to have created thousands of sexually explicit images of women. “undressed” The following are some examples of how to get started: “bikini” photos.
According to a review by WIRED of Grok’s publicly displayed live output, Grok continues to produce images of women wearing bikinis and underwear every few seconds in response to prompts from users on X. Grok posted at least ninety images of women wearing swimwear and different levels of undress in less than five minutes on Tuesday.
Musk’s chatbot is the subject of these images, which do not have any nudity. “stripping” Clothing can be created from images posted by other users. In an effort to avoid Grok’s security guardrails users often request that photos be edited in order to have women wearing a “string bikini” You can also use a “transparent bikini.”
Although AI-based image generation has been used in a harmful way, digitally harass The following are some examples of how to get started: abuse women for years—these outputs are often called deepfakes and are created by “nudify” software—the ongoing use of Grok to create vast numbers of nonconsensual images marks seemingly the most mainstream and widespread abuse instance to date. Like specific harmful nudify or “undress” software, Grok doesn’t charge the user money to generate images, produces results in seconds, and is available to millions of people on X—all of which may help to normalize the creation of nonconsensual intimate imagery.
“When a company offers generative AI tools on their platform, it is their responsibility to minimize the risk of image-based abuse,” Sloan Thompson says that EndTAB’s director of education and training, Sloan Thompson, is working to combat tech-facilitated violence. “What’s alarming here is that X has done the opposite. They’ve embedded AI-enabled image abuse directly into a mainstream platform, making sexual violence easier and more scalable.”
The system has the ability to produce such images, but it’s only been a few years since the first ones were created. known for months. Recently, users of X targeted images that were shared by celebrities, politicians and social media influencers. These users could reply to a comment from another user and request Grok change the photo.
Grok, a social media platform that allows women to upload photos of themselves and have them turned into videos has been able to successfully respond to these accounts. “bikini” image. Image. instanceSeveral X users asked Grok to alter the image of Sweden’s deputy prime minister in order for her to be wearing a swimsuit. Also, two UK government ministers have been hacked. “stripped” Reports on bikinis say.
On X, images of fully-clothed women are transformed to show them in little or no clothing. “@grok put her in a transparent bikini,” A typical message looks like this: Grok was asked to do something else in another series of messages. “inflate her chest by 90%,” Then, you can ask for help. “Inflate her thighs by 50%,” The final step is to “Change her clothes to a tiny bikini.”
Grok, according to one analyst who tracked deepfakes images for many years and requested anonymity for reasons of confidentiality, is now likely the most popular platform for hosting deepfake harmful images. “It’s wholly mainstream,” The researcher claims “It’s not a shadowy group [creating images], it’s literally everyone, of all backgrounds. People posting on their mains. Zero concern.”

