Close Menu
TechurzTechurz
    What's Hot

    Station F ramps up as a launchpad for Europe’s hottest AI startups

    July 6, 2026

    Smart glasses maker Even Realities hits $1B valuation with $150M funding led by Meituan, Tencent

    July 6, 2026

    Uber’s European expansion plans may have hit a speed bump

    July 5, 2026
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Tech Pulse
    • Station F ramps up as a launchpad for Europe’s hottest AI startups
    • Smart glasses maker Even Realities hits $1B valuation with $150M funding led by Meituan, Tencent
    • Uber’s European expansion plans may have hit a speed bump
    • IQM, Europe’s first public quantum company, admits the future of the tech is uncertain
    • Indian tech tycoon bets $30M of his own money to build AI alternative to Microsoft Office
    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    TechurzTechurz
    • Home
    • Tech Pulse
    • Future Tech
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    TechurzTechurz
    Home - AI - Sex is getting scrubbed from the internet, but a billionaire can sell you AI nudes
    AI

    Sex is getting scrubbed from the internet, but a billionaire can sell you AI nudes

    TechurzBy TechurzAugust 10, 2025Updated:May 10, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Sex is getting scrubbed from the internet, but a billionaire can sell you AI nudes
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    In the fascinating new reality of the internet, teen girls can’t learn about periods on Reddit and indie artists can’t sell smutty games on Itch.io, but a military contractor will make you nonconsensual deepfakes of Taylor Swift taking her top off for $30 a month.

    Early Tuesday, Elon Musk’s xAI launched a new image and video generator called Grok Imagine with a “spicy” mode whose output ranges from suggestive gestures to nudity. Because Grok Imagine also has no perceptible guardrails against creating images of real people, that means you can essentially generate softcore pornography of anyone who’s famous enough for Grok to recreate (although, pragmatically, it appears to mainly produce seriously NSFW output for women). Musk bragged that more than 34 million images were generated within a day of launching operations. But the real coup is demonstrating that xAI can ignore pressure to keep adult content off its services while helping users create something that’s widely reviled, thanks to legal gaps and political leverage that no other company has.

    xAI’s video feature — which debuted around the same time as a romantic chatbot companion named Valentine — seems from one angle strikingly weird, because it’s being released during a period where sex (down to the word itself) is being pushed to the margins of the internet. Late last month, the UK started enforcing age-gating rules that required X and other services to block sexual or otherwise “harmful” content for users under 18. Around the same time, an activist group called Collective Shout successfully pressured Steam and Itch.io to crack down on adult games and other media, leading Itch.io in particular to mass-delist any NSFW uploads.

    Deepfake porn of real people is a form of nonconsensual intimate imagery, which is illegal to intentionally publish in the US under the Take It Down Act, signed by President Donald Trump earlier this year. In a statement published Thursday, the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN) called Grok’s feature “part of a growing problem of image-based sexual abuse” and quipped that Grok clearly “didn’t get the memo” about the new law.

    But according to Mary Anne Franks, a professor at George Washington University Law School and president of the nonprofit Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI), there’s “little danger of Grok facing any kind of liability” under the Take It Down Act. “The criminal provision requires ‘publication,’ which, while unfortunately not defined in the statute, suggests making content available to more than one person,” Franks says. “If Grok only makes the videos viewable to the person who uses the tool, that wouldn’t seem to suffice.”

    Regulators have failed to enforce laws against big companies even when they apply

    Grok also likely isn’t required to remove the images under the Take It Down Act’s takedown provision — despite that rule being so worryingly broad that it threatens most social media services. “I don’t think Grok — or at least this particular Grok tool — even qualifies as a ‘covered platform,’ because the definition of covered platform requires that it ‘primarily provides a forum for user-generated content,’” she says. “AI-generated content often involves user inputs, but the actual content is, as the term indicates, generated by AI.” The takedown provision is also designed to work through people flagging content, and Grok doesn’t publicly post the images where other users can see them — it just makes them incredibly easy to create (and almost inevitably post to social media) at a large scale.

    Franks and the CCRI called out the limited definition of a “covered platform” as a problem for other reasons months ago. It’s one of several ways the Take It Down Act fails to serve people impacted by nonconsensual intimate imagery while posing a risk to web platforms acting in good faith. It might not even stop Grok from posting lewd AI-modified images of real people publicly, Franks told Spitfire News in June, in part because there are open questions about whether Grok is a “person” impacted by the law.

    These kinds of failures are a running theme in internet regulation that’s ostensibly supposed to crack down on harmful or inappropriate content; the UK’s mandate, for instance, has made it harder to run independent forums while still being fairly easy for kids to get around.

    Compounding this problem, particularly in the US, regulatory agencies have failed to impose meaningful consequences for all kinds of rulebreaking by powerful companies, including Musk’s many businesses. Trump has given Musk-owned companies an almost total pass for bad conduct, and even after formally leaving his powerful position at the Department of Government Efficiency, Musk likely maintains tremendous leverage over regulatory agencies like the FTC. (xAI just got a contract of up to $200 million with the Department of Defense.) So even if xAI were violating the Take It Down Act, it probably wouldn’t face investigation.

    Beyond the government, there are layers of gatekeepers that dictate what is acceptable on platforms, and they often take a dim view of sex. Apple, for instance, has pushed Discord, Reddit, Tumblr, and other platforms to censor NSFW material with varying levels of success. Steam and Itch.io reevaluated adult content under threat of losing relationships with payment processors and banks, which have previously put the screws on platforms like OnlyFans and Pornhub.

    In some cases, like Pornhub’s, this pressure is the result of platforms allowing unambiguously harmful and illegal uploads. But Apple and payment processors don’t appear to maintain hard-line, evenly enforced policies. Their enforcement seems to depend significantly on public pressure balanced against how much power the target has, and despite his falling out with Trump, virtually nobody in business has more political power than Musk. Apple and Musk have repeatedly clashed over Apple’s policies, and Apple has mostly held firm on things like its fee structure, but it’s apparently backed down on smaller issues, including returning its advertisements to X after pulling them from the Nazi-infested platform.

    Apple has banned smaller apps for making AI-generated nudes of real people. Will it exert that kind of pressure on Grok, whose video service launched exclusively on iOS? Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment, but don’t hold your breath.

    Grok’s new feature is harmful for people who can now easily have nonconsensual nudes made of them on a major AI service, but it also demonstrates how hollow the promise of a “safer” internet is proving. Small-time platforms face pressure to remove consensually recorded or entirely fictional media made by human beings, while a company run by a billionaire can make money off something that’s in some circumstances outright illegal. If you’re online in 2025, nothing is about sex, including sex — which, per usual, is about power.

    Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

    • Adi RobertsonClose
      Table of contents
      1 Adi Robertson
      2 AI
      3 Analysis
      4 Policy
      5 Report
      6 Speech
      7 xAI

      Adi Robertson

      Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All by Adi Robertson

    • AIClose

      AI

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All AI

    • AnalysisClose

      Analysis

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All Analysis

    • PolicyClose

      Policy

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All Policy

    • ReportClose

      Report

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All Report

    • SpeechClose

      Speech

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All Speech

    • xAIClose

      xAI

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      PlusFollow

      See All xAI

    Billionaire Internet nudes scrubbed sell Sex
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThat Typing Indicator You See? It’s Lying to You (Sometimes)
    Next Article This OneNote Trick Converts My Handwriting to Perfectly Legible Text
    Techurz
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AI Systems

    The Future of AI Systems: 7 Architectural Shifts Driving the AI Revolution

    June 13, 2026
    Opinion

    Bill Gurley, Jack Altman back startup Pursuit, which helps companies sell to government

    April 29, 2026
    Opinion

    Sam Altman-backed fusion startup Helion in talks to sell power to OpenAI

    March 23, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Latest Tech Pulse

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20252,290

    12 Father’s Day E-Card Sites That Are Actually Good

    June 4, 202523

    SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws major VC interest

    May 23, 202622
    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • LinkedIn

    Techurz helps readers stay ahead of digital change with clear, practical, future focused technology intelligence written today,searched tomorrow.

    X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Company
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Authors / Editorial Team
    • Write For Us
    • Advertise
    Policy
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Cookie Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • DMCA
    Explore
    • AI Systems
    • Cyber Reality
    • Future Tech
    • Disruption Lab
    • Signals
    • Tech Pulse
    • Sitemap

    Join the Techurz Brief

    The future does not arrive suddenly.
    Stay ahead with fast, sharp tech signals.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.