Malaysia to take legal action over Grok AI concerns

The Grok artificial intelligence website on a phone
Malaysia and Indonesia temporarily blocked Grok at the weekend amid concerns about user safety. -EPA

Malaysia's communications regulator will take legal action ‍against social media platform X due to concerns over user safety in relation ​to artificial intelligence feature Grok.

The generative AI chatbot Grok has sparked ⁠a global backlash by allowing users to create and publish sexualised images, prompting authorities around the world to take action against xAI, the Elon Musk-led firm behind the chatbot.

Malaysia and Indonesia temporarily blocked Grok at the weekend, ‌while Britain's ​media regulator launched an investigation into Musk's X and French officials ‍have reported the social media firm to prosecutors and regulators.

The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission said it had identified the misuse of Grok to generate and disseminate harmful content, including obscene, sexually explicit, indecent, grossly offensive, and non-consensual ​manipulated images.

"Content allegedly involving women and ‌minors is of serious concern... Such conduct contravenes Malaysian law and undermines the entities' stated safety ​commitments," the commission said on Tuesday.

A reply from xAI to a Reuters ‍email seeking comment seemed to be an automated response: "Legacy Media Lies."

X did not immediately respond to a request for ​comment.

Malaysia's ​communications regulator said it ​served notices to X and xAI this ​month to remove the harmful content but said no action has been taken by the firms.

Muslim-majority Malaysia has strict laws governing online content, including a ban on obscene and pornographic materials.

Malaysian authorities consider online gambling, scams, child pornography and grooming, cyberbullying and content related to race, religion and royalty as ‍harmful.