
The case turns on a question of authorship. When a user types a prompt and Grok returns a sexualised image of a real woman, who made it, the person at the keyboard or the company that built the machine?
On 3 June, Labour MP Jess Asato filed a claim at the High Court in England that asks a court to decide, and in doing so set up the first high-profile UK test of whether an AI developer can be held directly liable for what its tool generates.
The facts behind the claim are ugly and specific. Asato, who represents Lowestoft, says users prompted Grok in January to produce images of her in a bikini, alongside an explicit video described in her filing as showing her being chloroformed and prepared for a sexual assault.
Those images were then reshared and discussed on X, the platform xAI owns, and used to generate further material. Asato announced the claim herself, writing that she was “just one of thousands of women and even children” targeted by abusive AI deepfakes.
What makes the suit consequential is its legal theory rather than its facts. Asato is suing xAI for misuse of private information and breaches of data protection law, the argument being that the company is exposed even though individual users wrote the prompts.
She is seeking damages, a formal acknowledgement that what happened to her was unlawful, and an order requiring xAI to comply with UK law.
“My hope is that this will rebalance individuals’ rights against very large tech companies,” she told the Financial Times, “that should have put safeguards in place before they harmed women and children.”
That is the open question UK courts have not yet resolved. Existing deepfake cases tend to pursue the individuals who created or shared the material. Asato is going past them to the developer, testing whether building and operating a generator that produces non-consensual sexual imagery is itself actionable. A win would reshape how every company offering image generation in the UK thinks about liability. A loss would confirm that responsibility stops at the user.
xAI said in January that it had limited Grok’s ability to produce sexually explicit images, but those safeguards proved easy to circumvent when tested. The company has not commented publicly on Asato’s claim.
The lawsuit also lands in crowded company. xAI faces investigations over Grok’s image generation in the EU, the UK, and California, and the Ofcom probe into X under the Online Safety Act opened in January over reports the tool had been used to create non-consensual intimate images and child sexual abuse material. The pressure has come from outside Britain too, with Paris prosecutors and a Swiss minister both pursuing their own actions over Grok-generated material. Asato’s is the one framed most squarely as a precedent.
The timing is awkward for Musk, whose SpaceX, now the owner of both xAI and X, is preparing to go public. Whether the legal pressure reaches the IPO is unclear. What is clear is that the constraints on Grok now look likelier to come from a courtroom than from the company that built it.
