The European Union gave the middle finger to the Trump administration on Monday when its leaders announced a formal investigation into Elon Musk’s social media platform X over the spread of illicit content generated by artificial intelligence.
The EU alleges that X’s AI chatbot, Grok — which has generated numerous controversies in the past several months involving sexually explicit images, including ones depicting children — has violated the EU’s Digital Services Act, which is designed to curb the spread of abusive and manipulative content online. Just last month, the EU fined X $140 million for what it called the “deceptive design” of Musk’s verified user feature and a failure to comply with the DSA’s transparency rules.
“We believe that X may have breached the DSA,” a spokesperson said in a video announcement posted Monday. “We have seen over the last weeks and months antisemitic content. We have seen nonconsensual deepfakes of women. And we have seen child sexual abuse material.”
I’ve previously written about the widely publicized incidents in which Grok was found spreading antisemitism and other forms of hate speech, as well as the more recent incidents involving people using the chatbot to generate deepfake pornography — including child porn.
The EU has insisted that it will maintain complete independence as it weighs its rules regarding Big Tech. But the Trump administration has essentially done everything in its power to impose its will on behalf of the Big Tech oligarchs — including Musk, the multibillionaire whom Trump tapped to lead his so-called Department of Government Efficiency to fire thousands of federal civil servants — who are presently major GOP donors.








