Federal deputy Erika Hilton (PSOL-SP) reported the social network X and the artificial intelligence tool made available by the platform, Grok, to the Federal Public Ministry and the National Data Protection Agency for violating the right to image and personal information.
According to the deputy, the tool violates image rights by altering photos published online at the request of users, without the consent of the people photographed.
On X, users have asked Grok to remove clothes from photos posted by other users. The command is executed by AI without judgment of age or intellectual property, resulting in doctored photos even showing children in their underwear. The practice is popularly known as deepfake.
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“I am reporting the artificial intelligence “Grok” and the social network “This is all a CRIME. The right to an image is individual, it is not transferable through the “terms of use” of a social network.”
In the document obtained by InfoMoneythe parliamentarian highlights that the AI maintained by network For her, this loophole in Grok allows any user to create sexual deepfakes, a practice that has constantly been used to defame women and expose minors.
The petition also highlights that the company publicly acknowledged the tool’s flaws. On December 31, Grok’s website published an apology after generating sexualized images involving two underage girls.
Erika highlights that the justification that the production is artificial content does not rule out the illegality of the action. “The configuration of child pornography regardless of the way the content is produced”, he highlights.
The deputy calls for the opening of an investigation against the network and the platform. Furthermore, it requests the immediate suspension or imposition of restrictions on Grok’s functionality, as well as the deactivation of the tool in the national territory until new appropriate protection mechanisms are implemented. The petition provides for a daily fine of R$500,000 in case of non-compliance.
