‘I feel violated and dehumanised after X’s Grok AI stripped me naked’
- by Independent
- Jan 07, 2026
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Wednesday 07 January 2026 03:21 EST
Bookmark Women say they have been left feeling âviolated and humiliatedâ after âdehumanisingâ images of them have been created by users of Grok AI without their consent.
The pictures, created by Xâs in-built artificial intelligence, have seen usersâ clothes entirely digitally removed, or partially, such as being put in a bikini; with their body parts digitally altered, including their breasts being enlarged; and placed in sexualised contexts by Grok.
Evie, 22, who did not wish to share her surname, said she has been bombarded with more than 100 sexualised images of herself in less than a week, including one that digitally stripped her naked.
âI just feel like Iâve been violated,â she told The Independent. âIâm just so shocked there are people out there who can do this â and that there are so many people who will defend it and come up with excuses for this when itâs blatantly a huge violation.â
Among the digitally altered pictures of herself that Dr Daisy Dixon said she has been confronted with is an especially âfrighteningâ one in which the Grok user âincreased my breast size by like 1,000 per centâ.
Dr Dixon, a lecturer, said: âTo even just be put in a bikini and having my image manipulated like that feels like an attack on your sense of self, thereâs a kind of violence to it. You donât have ownership over your body â itâs objectifying.â
She highlighted the additional âpower moveâ being deployed, which is that Grok users are not only digitally altering images but then posting them back to their victims.
Technology secretary Liz Kendall has now demanded that Elon Muskâs xAI urgently deal with its chatbot being used to create the âabsolutely appallingâ sexualised deepfake images. Her calls come after media watchdog Ofcom said on Monday that it had made âurgent contactâ with the technology company after serious concerns were raised over Grok producing undressed images of people and sexualised images of children.
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The technology secretary has demanded that Elon Muskâs xAI urgently deal with its chatbot being used to create the âabsolutely appallingâ sexualised deepfake images
(AFP/Getty)
Musk has been accused of mocking the issue, which appears to be seen in his reposting of an image of a toaster with a digitally added bikini that is captioned âGrok can put a bikini on everythingâ, to which the X owner replied, âNot sure why, but I couldnât stop laughing about this one,â alongside laughing emojis.
A day later, on Saturday, Musk said: âAnyone using Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content.â X reposted this and added: âWe take action against illegal content on X, including child sexual abuse material (CSAM), by removing it, permanently suspending accounts, and working with local governments and law enforcement as necessary.â
The company referred The Independent to this post in response to our request for comment.
In responses from X seen by The Independent, women have been told âthere were no violations of the X rules in the content you reportedâ after they complained about degrading images of themselves that have been created by the companyâs AI. Some of this content has since been removed for unclear reasons.
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Dr Daisy Dixon called this yet âanother issue of misogynyâ as she joined calls for immediate action to be taken to tackle it
(Dr Daisy Dixon)
As of Tuesday morning, Jessaline Caine, 25, reported that Grok was still obliging requests that digitally alter a photo of her fully dressed as a three-year-old girl to put her in a string bikini, which also appeared to give her breasts. âIt just disgusted me so much... This is capable of being used as a tool of destruction,â said the 25-year-old, who is a child sexual abuse survivor. âMy heart really reaches out to those poor girls and boys who are in the situation I was in, and how a new layer of evil has been added to their lives.â
Ms Caine, who works in planning, said she has also faced countless versions of her social media profile picture that have been digitally altered by Grok users to put her in a string bikini. âItâs so dehumanising,â she said. âWomen are being objectified and sexualised... Youâre being humiliated online.â Speaking of the UKâs Online Safety Act, which pledges to provide protections for women and girls online, she said: âI donât feel protected, I feel embarrassed.â
When asked if she feels at all protected by technology companies or the authorities, Evie, who is a photographer, replied, âNot at all,â as she accused firms of âprioritising themselves over the safety of women and usersâ. Dr Dixon called this yet âanother issue of misogynyâ as she joined calls for immediate action to be taken to tackle it.
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Evie, 22, said she has been bombarded with more than 100 sexualised images of herself in less than a week
(Evie)
Womenâs rights campaigners, including Refuge, Womenâs Aid and Womankind Worldwide, have said they are âdeeply concernedâ by the reports, warning that the âdisturbingâ rise in AI intimate image abuse, facilitated by platforms such as Grok, has âdangerousâ consequences for women and girls, including to their safety and mental health. They are consequently calling for technology companies to implement effective safeguards and prevent perpetrators from causing harm â and for the government to hold them to account.
Emma Pickering, head of technology-facilitated abuse and economic empowerment at charity Refuge, said: âAs technology evolves, women and girlsâ safety depends on tighter regulation around image-based abuse, whether real or deepfake, as well as specialist training for prosecutors and police. Women have the right to use technology without fear of abuse, and when that right is violated, survivors must be able to access swift justice and robust protections.â
Under the Online Safety Act, social media firms must prevent and remove child sexual abuse material when they become aware of it. However, the law surrounding deepfakes of adults is more complicated. Legislation to criminalise the sharing of non-consensual deepfake images has progressed through parliament but not yet come into effect, according to Refuge.
Meanwhile, the charity says the sharing of real intimate images without consent is already illegal, but in practice, this law is not being effectively enforced.
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