LONDON — Britain has barred a Dutch far-right activist from entering the
country.
The U.K. Home Office revoked Eva Vlaardingerbroek’s travel permission after
deeming her presence not to be “conducive to the public good.”
Vlaardingerbroek, an anti-vax commentator and former member of the far-right
Dutch Forum for Democracy political party, on Wednesday posted a screenshot of
the decision to X.
She had previously spoken at a rally in London arranged by a far-right activist
known as Tommy Robinson, using the platform in September to call for the
“remigration” of immigrants and to talk about the “replacement of our people.”
Vlaardingerbroek linked the decision to her Friday post criticizing Prime
Minister Keir Starmer’s action against X, as he seeks to address a backlash over
sexualized deepfakes by Elon Musk’s AI tool Grok.
The reason given to Vlaardingerbroek read that her electronic travel
authorization (ETA), which European citizens need to enter Britain under
post-Brexit rules, had been revoked.
A Home Office official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, told POLITICO
the ETA had been “cancelled for being non-conducive to the public good.”
Tag - Platforms
BRUSSELS — Elon Musk has denied that X’s artificial intelligence tool Grok
generates illegal content in the wake of AI-generated undressed and sexualized
images on the platform.
In a fresh post Wednesday, X’s powerful owner sought to argue that users — not
the AI tool — are responsible and that the platform is fully compliant with all
laws.
“I[‘m] not aware of any naked underage images generated by Grok,” he said.
“Literally zero.”
“When asked to generate images, [Grok] will refuse to produce anything illegal,
as the operating principle for Grok is to obey the laws of any given country or
state,” he added.
“There may be times when adversarial hacking of Grok prompts does something
unexpected. If that happens, we fix the bug immediately.”
Musk’s remarks follow heightened scrutiny by both the EU and the U.K., with
Brussels describing the appearance of nonconsensual, sexually explicit deepfakes
on X as “illegal,” “appalling” and “disgusting.”
The U.K.’s communications watchdog, Ofcom, said Monday that it had launched an
investigation into X. On Wednesday, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the
platform is “acting to ensure full compliance” with the relevant law but said
the government won’t “back down.”
The EU’s tech chief Henna Virkkunen warned Monday that X should quickly “fix”
its AI tool, or the platform would face consequences under the bloc’s platform
law, the Digital Services Act.
The Commission last week ordered X to retain all of Grok’s data and documents
until the end of the year.
Just 11 days ago, Musk said that “anyone using Grok to make illegal content will
suffer the same consequences as if they upload illegal content” in response to a
post about the inappropriate images.
The company’s safety team posted a similar line, warning that it takes action
against illegal activity, including child sexual abuse material.
Ultra-fast-fashion giant Shein will attend a hearing at the European Parliament
to discuss the company’s business practices.
Pressure has been mounting on Shein to meet with policymakers, who are concerned
about the influx of cheap parcels it generates as well as suspected breaches of
EU law and the environmental impact it has, especially as the company was caught
selling child-like sex dolls in France.
The Parliament’s internal market committee had been trying for weeks to bring
the platform in for a hearing, but to no avail.
Now a date has finally been set for Jan. 27, according to officials. The head of
Shein’s Business Integrity Group for Greater Europe, Yinan Zhu, will appear
before the committee.
“Shein finally answers to EU lawmakers and will appear before the IMCO Committee
after I had several email exchanges with them,” said the committee’s chair,
German Green MEP Anna Cavazzini.
In a letter seen by POLITICO, Zhu confirmed his attendance and asked for a
separate meeting with the committee chair. Zhu said he wants to discuss in
detail the measures that the company is putting in place to address lawmakers’
concerns.
Cavazzini’s goal is to scrutinize the platform. “MEPs finally get to their right
to closely scrutinise both the Commission’s enforcement efforts and the conduct
of major online marketplaces in the light of Shein’s recent scandals,” she said.
Shein’s Martin Reidy said in a statement: “We intend to attend the IMCO
committee meeting on 27 January and look forward to a constructive exchange with
members on the industry-wide challenge of ensuring customer safety and
protection online.”
LONDON — The U.K. government’s upcoming ban on nudification apps won’t apply to
general-purpose AI tools like Elon Musk’s Grok, according to Tech Secretary Liz
Kendall.
The ban will “apply to applications that have one despicable purpose only: to
use generative AI to turn images of real people into fake nude pictures and
videos without their permission,” Kendall said in a letter to Science,
Innovation and Technology committee chair Chi Onwurah published Wednesday.
Grok, which is made by Musk’s AI company xAI but is also accessible inside his
social media platform X, has sparked a political uproar because it has been used
to create a wave of sexualized nonconsensual deepfakes, many targeting women and
some children.
But Grok can be used to generate a wide range of images and has other
functionalities, including text generation, so does not have the sole purpose of
generating sexualized or nude images.
The U.K. government announced its plan to ban nudification apps in December,
before the Grok controversy took off, but Kendall has given it as an example of
ways that the government is cracking down on AI-generated intimate image abuse.
Kendall said the nudification ban will be put into effect using the Crime and
Policing Bill, which is currently passing through committee stage.
The Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology did not immediately
respond when contacted by POLITICO for comment.
The U.K.’s media regulator Ofcom launched an investigation into X on Monday to
determine whether the platform has complied with its duties under the Online
Safety Act to protect British users from illegal content. The U.K, government
has said Ofcom has its full support to use whatever enforcement tools it deems
fit, which could include blocking X in the U.K. or issuing a fine.
A clash between Poland’s right-wing president and its centrist ruling coalition
over the European Union’s flagship social media law is putting the country
further at risk of multimillion euro fines from Brussels.
President Karol Nawrocki is holding up a bill that would implement the EU’s
Digital Services Act, a tech law that allows regulators to police how social
media firms moderate content. Nawrocki, an ally of U.S. President Donald Trump,
said in a statement that the law would “give control of content on the internet
to officials subordinate to the government, not to independent courts.”
The government coalition led by Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Nawrocki’s rival,
warned this further exposed them to the risk of EU fines as high as €9.5
million.
Deputy Digital Minister Dariusz Standerski said in a TV interview that, “since
the president decided to veto this law, I’m assuming he is also willing to have
these costs [of a potential fine] charged to the budget of the President’s
Office.”
Nawrocki’s refusal to sign the bill brings back bad memories of Warsaw’s
years-long clash with Brussels over the rule of law, a conflict that began when
Nawrocki’s Law and Justice party rose to power in 2015 and started reforming the
country’s courts and regulators. The EU imposed €320 million in penalties on
Poland from 2021-2023.
Warsaw was already in a fight with the Commission over its slow implementation
of the tech rulebook since 2024, when the EU executive put Poland on notice for
delaying the law’s implementation and for not designating a responsible
authority. In May last year Brussels took Warsaw to court over the issue.
If the EU imposes new fines over the rollout of digital rules, it would
“reignite debates reminiscent of the rule-of-law mechanism and frozen funds
disputes,” said Jakub Szymik, founder of Warsaw-based non-profit watchdog group
CEE Digital Democracy Watch.
Failure to implement the tech law could in the long run even lead to fines and
penalties accruing over time, as happened when Warsaw refused to reform its
courts during the earlier rule of law crisis.
The European Commission said in a statement that it “will not comment on
national legislative procedures.” It added that “implementing the [Digital
Services Act] into national law is essential to allow users in Poland to benefit
from the same DSA rights.”
“This is why we have an ongoing infringement procedure against Poland” for its
“failure to designate and empower” a responsible authority, the statement said.
Under the tech platforms law, countries were supposed to designate a national
authority to oversee the rules by February 2024. Poland is the only EU country
that hasn’t moved to at least formally agree on which regulator that should be.
The European Commission is the chief regulator for a group of very large online
platforms, including Elon Musk’s X, Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, Google’s
YouTube, Chinese-owned TikTok and Shein and others.
But national governments have the power to enforce the law on smaller platforms
and certify third parties for dispute resolution, among other things. National
laws allow users to exercise their rights to appeal to online platforms and
challenge decisions.
When blocking the bill last Friday, Nawrocki said a new version could be ready
within two months.
But that was “very unlikely … given that work on the current version has been
ongoing for nearly two years and no concrete alternative has been presented” by
the president, said Szymik, the NGO official.
The Digital Services Act has become a flashpoint in the political fight between
Brussels and Washington over how to police online platforms. The EU imposed its
first-ever fine under the law on X in December, prompting the U.S.
administration to sanction former EU Commissioner Thierry Breton and four other
Europeans.
Nawrocki last week likened the law to “the construction of the Ministry of Truth
from George Orwell’s novel 1984,” a criticism that echoed claims by Trump and
his top MAGA officials that the law censored conservatives and right-wingers.
Bartosz Brzeziński contributed reporting.
LONDON — The U.S. Department of State’s Sarah B. Rogers says “nothing is off the
table” if the U.K. government makes good on its threat to ban Elon Musk’s X over
concerns about a deluge of AI-generated sexualized deepfakes on the platform.
“I would say from America’s perspective … nothing is off the table when it comes
to free speech,” Rogers, the under secretary of state for public diplomacy, told
GB News in an interview which aired in the U.K. in the early hours of Tuesday
morning.
“Let’s wait and see what Ofcom does and we’ll see what America does in
response,” she added.
Rogers, an appointee of President Donald Trump, has repeatedly criticized
European efforts to crack down on hate speech. She was involved in last month’s
State Department decision to sanction former European Commissioner Thierry
Breton and four other European nationals involved in efforts to curb the spread
of disinformation.
At least one lawmaker aligned with Trump has also weighed in on behalf of the
Elon Musk-owned platform. U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Florida Republican,
said last week she was drafting legislation to sanction the U.K. if X is banned
in the country.
In her GB News interview Rogers accused the British government of wanting “the
ability to curate a public square, to suppress political viewpoints it
dislikes.”
X has a “political valence that the British government is antagonistic to,
doesn’t like, and that’s what’s really going on,” she added.
The U.S. embassy in London did not immediately respond when contacted by
POLITICO for comment.
Ofcom, the U.K.’s online safety watchdog, is currently investigating whether X
failed to comply with its duties under the Online Safety Act by allowing its
Grok AI chatbot to create and distribute non-consensual intimate images,
including potential child sexual abuse material.
Technology Secretary Liz Kendall told the House of Commons on Monday that Ofcom
has the government’s backing to use the full extent of its powers, which include
imposing financial penalties of up to £18 million or 10 percent of a company’s
worldwide revenue, and in the most serious cases seeking a court order to block
X from functioning in the U.K.
“This is not, as some would claim, about restricting freedom of speech, which is
something that I and the whole Government hold very dear. It is about tackling
violence against women and girls. It is about upholding basic British values of
decency and respect, and ensuring that the standards that we expect offline are
upheld online. It is about exercising our sovereign power and responsibility to
uphold the laws of this land,” she said.
At a behind-closed-doors meeting with Labour lawmakers on Monday Prime Minister
Keir Starmer said: “If X cannot control Grok, we will — and we’ll do it fast
because if you profit from harm and abuse, you lose the right to self regulate.”
POLITICO reported last week that Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy raised the
issue of Grok with Vice President Vance, and Lammy later told The Guardian that
Vance had agreed the deepfaked images spreading on X were “unacceptable.”
BRUSSELS — The European Commission’s top tech official has warned Elon Musk’s X
to quickly “fix” its AI tool Grok — or face consequences under the controversial
Digital Services Act.
The fact that Grok allows users to generate pictures that depict women and
minors undressed and sexualized is “horrendous”, said Henna Virkkunen, the
Commission’s tech chief.
She urged the company to take immediate action.
“X now has to fix its AI tool in the EU, and they have to do it quickly,” she
said in a post on the platform.
If that doesn’t happen, the European Commission is ready to strike under the the
Digital Services Act, its law governing digital platforms.
“We will not hesitate to put the DSA to its full use to protect EU citizens.”
Under the DSA, platforms like X must address systemic risks, including those
related to the spread of illegal content, or face fines of up to 6 per cent of
their global annual turnover.
Last month the European Commission imposed a €120 million fine on X for minor
transparency infringements, drawing howls of outrage from the Trump
administration.
The Commission ordered X last week to retain all documents and data related to
Grok until the end of this year.
LONDON — U.K. ministers are warning Elon Musk’s X it faces a ban if it doesn’t
get its act together. But outlawing the social media platform is easier said
than done.
The U.K.’s communications regulator Ofcom on Monday launched a formal
investigation into a deluge of non-consensual sexualized deepfakes produced by
X’s AI chatbot Grok amid growing calls for action from U.K. politicians.
It will determine whether the creation and distribution of deepfakes on the
platform, which have targeted women and children, constitutes a breach of the
company’s duties under the U.K.’s Online Safety Act (OSA).
U.K. ministers have repeatedly called for Ofcom, the regulator tasked with
policing social media platforms, to take urgent action over the deepfakes.
U.K. Technology Secretary Liz Kendall on Friday offered her “full support” to
the U.K. regulator to block X from being accessed in the U.K., if it chooses to.
“I would remind xAI that the Online Safety Act Includes the power to block
services from being accessed in the U.K., if they refuse to comply with U.K.
law. If Ofcom decide to use those powers they will have our full support,” she
said in a statement.
The suggestion has drawn Musk’s ire. The tech billionaire branded the British
government “fascist” over the weekend, and accused it of “finding any excuse for
censorship.”
With Ofcom testing its new regulatory powers against one of the most
high-profile tech giants for the first time, it is hard to predict what happens
next.
NOT GOING NUCLEAR — FOR NOW
Ofcom has so far avoided its smash-glass option.
Under the OSA it could seek a court order blocking “ancillary” services, like
those those processing subscription payments on X’s behalf, and ask internet
providers to block X from operating in the U.K.
Taking that route would mean bypassing a formal investigation, but that
is generally considered a last resort according to Ofcom’s guidance. To do so,
Ofcom would need to prove that risk of harm to U.K. users is particularly
great.
Before launching its investigation Monday, the regulator made “urgent contact”
with X on Jan. 5, giving the platform until last Friday to respond.
Ofcom stressed the importance of “due process” and of ensuring its
investigations are “legally robust and fairly decided.”
LIMITED REACH
The OSA only covers U.K. users. It’s a point ministers have been keen to stress
amid concerns its interaction with the U.S. First Amendment, which guarantees
free speech, could become a flashpoint in trade negotiations with
Washington. It’s not enough for officials or ministers to believe X has failed
to protect users generally.
The most egregious material might not even be on X. Child sexual abuse charity
the Internet Watch Foundation said last week that its analysts had found what
appeared to be Grok-produced Child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on a dark web
forum, rather than X itself — so it’s far from self-evident that Ofcom taking
the nuclear option against X would ever have been legally justified.
X did not comment on Ofcom’s investigation when contacted by POLITICO, but
referred back to a statement issued on Jan. 4 about the issue of deepfakes on
the platform.
“We take action against illegal content on X, including Child Sexual Abuse
Material (CSAM), by removing it, permanently suspending accounts, and working
with local governments and law enforcement as necessary. Anyone using or
prompting Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if
they upload illegal content,” the statement said.
BIG TEST
The OSA came into force last summer, and until now Ofcom’s enforcement actions
have focused on pornography site providers for not implementing age-checks.
Online safety campaigners have argued this indicates Ofcom is more interested in
going after low-hanging fruit than challenging more powerful tech companies. “It
has been striking to many that of the 40+ investigations it has launched so
far, not one has been directed at large … services,” the online safety campaign
group the Molly Rose Foundation said in September.
That means the X investigation is the OSA’s first big test, and it’s especially
thorny because it involves an AI chatbot. The Science, Innovation and Technology
committee wrote in a report published last summer that the legislation does
not provide sufficient protections against generative AI, a point Technology
Secretary Liz Kendall herself conceded in a recent evidence session.
POLITICAL RISKS
If Ofcom concludes X hasn’t broken the law there are likely to be calls from OSA
critics, both inside and outside Parliament, to return to the drawing board.
It would also put the government, which has promised to act if Ofcom doesn’t, in
a tricky spot. The PM’s spokesperson on Monday described child sexual abuse
imagery as “the worst crimes imaginable.”
Ofcom could also conclude X has broken the law, but decide against imposing
sanctions, according to its enforcement guidance.
The outcome of Ofcom’s investigation will be watched closely by the White House
and is fraught with diplomatic peril for the U.K. government, which has already
been criticized for implementing the new online safety law by Donald Trump and
his allies.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy raised the Grok issue with U.S. Vice President JD
Vance last week, POLITICO reported.
But other Republicans are readying for a geopolitical fight: GOP Congresswoman
Anna Paulina Luna, a member of the U.S. House foreign affairs committee,
said she was drafting legislation to sanction the U.K. if X does get blocked.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen blasted Elon Musk’s platform
X over the spread of sexually explicit deepfakes created using its AI chatbot
Grok.
“I am appalled that a tech platform is enabling users to digitally undress women
and children online. This is unthinkable behavior. And the harm caused by these
deepfakes is very real,” von der Leyen said in an interview with multiple
European media outlets, including Reuters and Corriere della Sera.
“We will not be outsourcing child protection and consent to Silicon Valley. If
they don’t act, we will,” she warned.
Since the beginning of January, thousands of women and teenagers, including
public figures, have reported that their photos published on social media have
been “undressed” and put in bikinis by Grok at the request of users.
The deepfake tool has prompted investigations from regulators across Europe,
including in Brussels, Dublin, Paris and London.
The European Commission ordered X on Thursday to retain “all internal documents
and data relating to Grok” — an escalation of the ongoing investigation into X’s
content moderation policies — after calling the nonconsensual, sexually explicit
deepfakes “illegal,” “appalling” and “disgusting.”
In response, X made its controversial AI image generation feature only available
to users with paid subscriptions. European Commission spokesperson Thomas
Regnier said that limiting the tool’s use to paying subscribers did not mean an
end to the EU’s investigation.
The scandal has emerged as a fresh test of the EU’s resolve to rein in Musk and
U.S. Big Tech firms. Only a month earlier, Brussels fined X €120 million for
breaching the bloc’s landmark platform law, the Digital Services Act (DSA).
The fine sparked a swift and forceful reaction from Washington, with the U.S.
administration imposing a travel ban on the EU’s former digital commissioner and
chief architect of the DSA, Thierry Breton.
X did not immediately respond to POLITICO’s request for comment about von der
Leyen’s criticism.
LONDON — The U.K.’s communications watchdog Ofcom said Monday it has launched an
investigation into Elon Musk’s social media platform X over reports that its AI
chatbot Grok is producing non-consensual sexualized deepfakes of women and
children.
The investigation will ascertain whether the platform has complied with its
duties under the U.K.’s Online Safety Act to protect British users from illegal
content.
“There have been deeply concerning reports of the Grok AI chatbot account on X
being used to create and share undressed images of people — which may amount to
intimate image abuse or pornography — and sexualized images of children that may
amount to child sexual abuse material,” Ofcom said in a press release.
This is a developing story.