Privacy commissioner says Grok deepfakes violated Canadian privacy law
OTTAWA — Sexual deepfakes created by Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot and shared on his X platform violated Canada’s privacy law — and while the company has made some changes, they don’t go far enough, the privacy commissioner said Thursday.
Philippe Dufresne said Grok’s AI image generation tool was launched without adequate safeguards and didn’t properly consider harms to privacy.
“This lack of protection allowed users to create and share sexualized deepfakes, largely targeting women and children. According to researchers, Grok was at one point generating well over 6,000 sexualized images per hour,” Dufresne said.
The commissioner launched the investigation into Grok in January. It looked at whether the companies involved are complying with privacy law and whether they obtained “valid consent” to collect, use and disclose personal information to create deepfakes, including explicit content.


