Grok’s nonconsensual porn problem is part of a long, gross legacy
- by Vox
- Jan 10, 2026
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Jan 10, 2026, 12:00 PM UTC
Anna Barclay/Getty Images The return of the porn wars
Porn didn’t only help VHS win over Betamax. The industry has also been linked to the mainstreaming of Super 8 film (easy and convenient for amateur filmmakers), the development of streaming video (private and easily accessible), the development of web payments (comes with paywalled streaming video), the development of web analytics (good for the complex business transactions of adult streaming), and the victory of Blu-ray over HD DVD. (Like VHS, Blu-rays held a lot more data than its competitors, which is especially attractive in the porn market.)
Then there were the systems of image distribution that developed outside of porn as an industry. A surprising amount of them revolved around people trying to share sexualized images of women’s bodies as quickly as possible — only in these cases, the people whose images getting distributed weren’t necessarily consenting adults who were getting paid for their trouble.
Sometimes the innovation was more or less harmless. Google Images was developed because so many people went searching for pictures of Jennifer Lopez in her famously low-cut Versace gown in 2000, a distinction Lopez has treated as a feather in her cap. In this case, Lopez wore the dress to a high-profile event and wanted to be seen and talked about, so it’s reasonable to assume consent.
Other times it got cloudier. The impetus for YouTube came when developers wanted to watch Janet Jackson’s 2004 wardrobe malfunction and were frustrated that it took so long to find video of it on the internet. Jackson has always maintained that she did not intend for her breast to be seen on national TV, so here, we’re dealing with nonconsensual nudity.
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