A Labour MP in the UK has launched legal proceedings against xAI, the artificial intelligence company founded by Elon Musk, arguing that technology firms should be held accountable when their systems are used to create harmful and degrading content about real people.

According to reporting by The Guardian, Jess Asato, the Labour MP for Lowestoft, has filed a claim in the High Court alleging that xAI failed to prevent the creation of manipulated images and videos depicting her in sexualised scenarios without her consent. The claim centres on content allegedly generated through Grok, the company’s AI chatbot and image-generation tool.
The case emerges amid growing concerns over the use of artificial intelligence to create so-called “deepfakes”, digitally altered images, audio recordings and videos that can realistically imitate real individuals. Critics argue that advances in generative AI have outpaced existing legal safeguards, raising new questions about privacy, consent and accountability.
Asato has argued that technology companies should bear greater responsibility when their products are used to create harmful content involving identifiable individuals. The MP maintains that the material generated about her caused distress and highlights broader risks faced by women and young people online. The legal action is expected to contribute to an emerging debate over where responsibility lies when AI systems are used to produce misleading or degrading representations of real people. At the centre of the dispute is whether developers can be held accountable for content generated through tools they design and deploy.
Lawyers acting on behalf of Asato contend that AI-generated images that intentionally resemble a real person should not be treated differently from other forms of representation simply because they were produced by a machine. The case may therefore test how existing legal frameworks apply to rapidly evolving forms of synthetic media.
The dispute comes after a series of controversies involving Grok earlier this year. As reported in the article, regulators and politicians raised concerns after users generated large volumes of altered images depicting real women, prompting scrutiny from UK authorities and calls for stronger oversight of AI technologies.
In response to criticism, X and xAI introduced additional restrictions on image-generation features and announced measures intended to limit the creation of manipulated images involving real individuals. However, campaigners have argued that stronger safeguards should have been implemented before such content became widely available.
Beyond the immediate legal questions, the lawsuit reflects wider concerns about the governance of artificial intelligence and the responsibilities of technology companies operating increasingly powerful generative systems. As governments and regulators around the world seek to develop rules for AI, the outcome of the case could help shape future debates about digital rights, platform accountability and the protection of individuals from harmful synthetic content.
This article is based on reporting by Peter Walker, “Labour MP sues Elon Musk’s xAI company over fake sexualised images,” published in The Guardian on 3 June 2026.
