Kuala Lumpur: Grok has faced its first national bans after Malaysia and Indonesia restricted access to the artificial intelligence chatbot developed for Elon Musk’s social media platform X.
Grok, which allows users to generate and edit images, has been criticised for being used to manipulate photographs of real people and place them in sexualised and revealing situations without consent. Authorities in both countries have said the tool poses a serious risk to online safety, human dignity and the protection of children.
Malaysia and Indonesia have become the first nations in the world to block Grok. Officials have warned that the technology could be used to produce pornographic material and sexually explicit deepfakes, including images involving women and minors. Regulators have stressed that such misuse represents a violation of human rights and digital security.
In Malaysia, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission has said notices were sent to X earlier this year after repeated misuse of Grok was detected. The commission said that the response received from X focused mainly on how users could report harmful content rather than addressing the underlying design risks of the platform.
In Indonesia, Communications and Digital Affairs Minister Meutya Hafid said that, using Grok to produce sexually explicit and non-consensual content is a serious violation of human dignity and online safety. The ministry has asked X to provide clarification on how Grok operates and how safeguards will be improved.

Grok has also faced criticism beyond Southeast Asia. In Britain, pressure has increased on X following calls for action over failures to comply with online safety laws. Technology Secretary Liz Kendall has backed demands to restrict access to platforms that do not adequately protect users from harmful content.
International condemnation has continued to grow. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said that, the use of artificial intelligence to generate sexualised images of people is disgraceful and disgusting. Other global leaders and regulators have echoed concerns that AI tools are advancing faster than the safeguards designed to control misuse.
Elon Musk has responded to criticism by stating that opponents of X are seeking any excuse for censorship. However, governments have maintained that action is necessary when platforms fail to prevent serious harm. The focus, regulators say, is not censorship but protection of fundamental rights and public safety.
The bans imposed on Grok in Malaysia and Indonesia have highlighted the increasing willingness of governments to act against artificial intelligence tools that enable exploitation. The cases have reinforced the message that innovation must be balanced with responsibility, particularly when technology can be used to violate consent, privacy and dignity in the digital space.
The blocking of Grok has marked a turning point in global regulation of AI-generated content, signalling that stronger oversight is likely as authorities seek to curb the spread of deepfakes and online abuse.

