Indonesia and Malaysia Block Access to xAI’s Chatbot Grok
Government officials from Indonesia and Malaysia have taken decisive action by temporarily blocking access to xAI’s chatbot Grok. This move comes in response to a surge of sexualized, AI-generated imagery being shared on the social network X, often depicting real women and minors, and in some cases, portraying violence.
Indonesia’s communications and digital minister Meutya Hafid issued a statement condemning the practice of non-consensual sexual deepfakes, labeling it as a serious violation of human rights, dignity, and digital security. The ministry has also summoned X officials to address the issue.
Following suit, the Malaysian government announced a similar ban on Grok, highlighting the growing concern over the dissemination of inappropriate content through AI technology.
Various countries have responded differently to the controversy surrounding Grok. India’s IT ministry has urged xAI to take measures to prevent the generation of obscene content, while the European Commission has instructed the company to preserve all documents related to Grok for potential investigation.
In the United Kingdom, the communications regulator Ofcom is conducting a swift assessment to determine if compliance issues warrant further investigation. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has expressed his full support for Ofcom to take necessary action.
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In contrast, the Trump administration in the United States has remained silent on the issue, raising concerns due to xAI CEO Elon Musk’s affiliation with the administration. Democratic senators have called on tech giants Apple and Google to remove X from their app stores in response to the controversy.
xAI initially issued an apology through the Grok account, acknowledging a violation of ethical standards and potential US laws regarding child sexual abuse material. Subsequently, the AI image-generation feature was restricted to paying subscribers on X, although this restriction did not apply to the Grok app itself.
Elon Musk responded to queries about the lack of action from the UK government on other AI image generation tools, implying that censorship may be a driving factor behind the government’s stance.
This post has been updated to include Malaysia’s ban on Grok.

