A sitting UK Member of Parliament has filed a lawsuit against Elon Musk’s xAI over fake sexual images generated by its Grok chatbot. The case is being positioned as a potential test case under UK legal frameworks, targeting the intersection of AI technology, privacy rights, and data protection law.
The MP, who has not been publicly named, is challenging xAI over the creation of non-consensual intimate imagery.
This lawsuit arrives amid a sprawling scandal around Grok’s ability to generate sexually explicit deepfake images-a problem that surfaced in 2025 when users manipulated the chatbot into producing fake intimate images of real people, including minors.
In the US, Ashley St. Clair filed lawsuits in New York and California related to the Grok scandal. Three teenage victims from Tennessee filed a class-action lawsuit against xAI in March 2026, alleging the platform generated explicit images of minors.
On the regulatory side, the UK’s communications regulator Ofcom launched a formal investigation into X and Grok on January 12, 2026, under the Online Safety Act 2023, which classifies non-consensual intimate images as priority illegal content.
The MP’s lawsuit layers private legal action on top of that regulatory investigation, creating a two-pronged pressure campaign against xAI on British soil.
UK courts have not yet produced a definitive ruling on liability when an AI system generates non-consensual sexual imagery of a real person. The Online Safety Act 2023 places obligations on platforms to prevent the spread of priority illegal content, but it was designed primarily with social media distribution in mind-not with the scenario where the platform's own AI tool creates the content.
The MP’s legal team will likely argue that xAI bears direct responsibility, not just as a distributor of harmful content, but as the entity whose technology manufactured it.
A successful private lawsuit on top of the Ofcom probe creates a dual-threat environment where AI companies face both government enforcement and civil liability.