Grok's AI image generation tool violated Canadian privacy law, watchdog says


FILE PHOTO: xAI and Grok logos are seen in this illustration taken, February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

OTTAWA, June 11 (Reuters) - ⁠xAI's Grok chatbot violated Canadian privacy laws by ⁠launching an image-generation tool that allowed users to ‌create and share non-consensual, sexualized deep fakes, an official watchdog said in a report on Thursday.

After Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne launched a ​formal probe in January, xAI announced ⁠tweaks to prevent Grok ⁠from allowing the editing of images of real people in ⁠revealing ‌clothing. Britain and Canada are two in a growing list of countries cracking down on ⁠explicit content generated by Grok.

"xAI violated Canada's federal ​private sector ‌privacy law by launching the Grok AI-powered image ⁠generation tool ​without implementing appropriate safeguards from the outset," Dufresne told a press conference.

Dufresne, who does not have the power to impose ⁠fines or order policy changes, said ​he was encouraged by the changes xAI had made to reduce the chances of sexualized deep fakes.

xAI has committed ⁠to regularly monitoring for sexualized deep fakes before an incident is reported, and not just in response to incidents, he said.

xAI, the artificial intelligence company owned by ​Elon Musk, was not immediately available ⁠for comment.

The Canadian government released a digital safety bill ​on Wednesday that would ban social ‌media for children under 16 ​and set up a digital regulator.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Maria Cheng and Mark Porter)

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