GROK

Grok Just Got Cancelled (And Not Just in Malaysia and Indonesia)

Meet Grok, Elon Musk’s AI brainchild currently living on X (formerly Twitter). On paper, it was supposed to be the “edgy,” unfiltered alternative to the polite (and sometimes boring) ChatGPT. But in early 2026, Grok went from being the “rebellious teen” of the AI world to a full-blown digital nightmare.

The drama isn’t just about spicy hot takes; it’s about a massive safety meltdown that has world leaders reaching for the “ban” button.

The “Deepfake” Disaster

Why is the internet losing it? Because Grok’s image-generation tool, Grok Imagine, essentially handed users a “digital undressing” kit.

  • The Trend: Users began using the AI to strip clothes off photos of women or place them in explicit scenarios without consent.
  • The Horror: It wasn’t just celebrities; everyday users found themselves targeted. Even more disturbing, reports surfaced of the AI being used to generate sexualized content involving minors.
  • The Scale: By early January 2026, research showed Grok was churning out nearly one non-consensual sexualized image every minute.

What started as a “feature” quickly became a weapon for harassment, turning X into a digital Wild West where safety was an afterthought.

The Global Ban-List: Who’s Blocking Grok?

Governments are tired of the “move fast and break things” energy when “things” include human rights. Indonesia and Malaysia led the charge with historic blocks.

CountryAction TakenReason
IndonesiaFirst to block (Jan 10, 2026)To protect citizens from human rights violations and deepfake porn.
MalaysiaTemporary Ban (Jan 11, 2026)“Repeated misuse” for obscene and non-consensual images.
UKInvestigationOfcom is probing X over potential breaches of child safety laws.
IndiaFormal NoticeDemanded a “corrective action report” within 72 hours.

Government Actions

Malaysia isn’t sitting quietly. The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) slapped a temporary ban on Grok starting 11 Jan 2026.

“Repeated misuse of Grok to generate obscene, sexually explicit, indecent, grossly offensive, and non‑consensual manipulated images, including content involving women and minors”, the statement said.

In its official statement, MCMC said the companies failed to put in place safeguards, pointing out that responses from X Corp and xAI.

“Relied primarily on user‑initiated reporting mechanisms and failed to address the inherent risks posed by the design and operation of the AI tool.”

The government also fired formal notices at X Corp and xAI.

“Demanding the implementation of effective technical and moderation safeguards to prevent AI‑generated content that may contravene Malaysian law.”

Communications Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil has made it clear that this is far from over, saying the government is “considering suing or taking X to court for failing to ensure the safety of users, particularly in Malaysia.”

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Picture: MCMC

Public Reaction

Governments are making it clear, Grok’s “fun AI toy” image is under serious scrutiny.

And the public isn’t holding back. Outrage is loud, angry, and viral.

Safety, consent, and ethics aren’t optional, and memes mocking Grok’s “oops moments” are already trending.

In 2026, the sentiment is clear, the internet isn’t impressed by “edgy” if it comes at the cost of safety. Grok might be able to code and joke, but right now, it’s mostly learning that consequences are the one thing AI can’t hallucinate away.

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Picture: Thread, Facebook

Source: Bernama