Malaysia has lifted its ban on Elon Musk's Grok chatbot after taking X at its word regarding the implementation of necessary safeguards to prevent misuse. The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) had initially imposed a temporary halt on access to Grok in early January, citing concerns over its use in generating deepfake sexualized images of people.
The restrictions were put in place amid multiple reports of Grok being used to create such content, including images of women and children. The MCMC stated that the ban would remain until X Corp and parent company xAI could prove they had taken adequate measures to prevent such misuse.
However, it appears that Malaysian authorities are now satisfied with the safety measures implemented by Musk's company. A statement from the MCMC confirms that it is monitoring Grok's activities closely and will take firm action if any further user safety breaches or violations of Malaysian laws occur.
It's worth noting that Malaysia is not the only country to have taken action against Grok. Indonesia also imposed a ban on the chatbot, while the UK regulator Ofcom has opened an investigation into X under its Online Safety Act following reports of non-consensual sexual deepfakes.
X has since made changes to its image-editing policies and announced that Grok will no longer allow the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing. However, a recent report by the Center for Countering Digital Hate estimated that Grok generated around 3 million sexualized images over an 11-day period, with approximately 23,000 of these images being of children.
The lifting of Malaysia's ban on Grok has left some questions unanswered regarding the effectiveness of X's safety measures and its commitment to preventing the misuse of its platform.
The restrictions were put in place amid multiple reports of Grok being used to create such content, including images of women and children. The MCMC stated that the ban would remain until X Corp and parent company xAI could prove they had taken adequate measures to prevent such misuse.
However, it appears that Malaysian authorities are now satisfied with the safety measures implemented by Musk's company. A statement from the MCMC confirms that it is monitoring Grok's activities closely and will take firm action if any further user safety breaches or violations of Malaysian laws occur.
It's worth noting that Malaysia is not the only country to have taken action against Grok. Indonesia also imposed a ban on the chatbot, while the UK regulator Ofcom has opened an investigation into X under its Online Safety Act following reports of non-consensual sexual deepfakes.
X has since made changes to its image-editing policies and announced that Grok will no longer allow the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing. However, a recent report by the Center for Countering Digital Hate estimated that Grok generated around 3 million sexualized images over an 11-day period, with approximately 23,000 of these images being of children.
The lifting of Malaysia's ban on Grok has left some questions unanswered regarding the effectiveness of X's safety measures and its commitment to preventing the misuse of its platform.