H
technology
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Wave of Grok AI fake images of women and girls appalling, says UK minister

2 days ago
A picture


The UK technology secretary has called a wave of images of women and children with their clothes digitally removed generated by Elon Musk’s Grok AI “appalling and unacceptable in decent society”.After thousands of intimate deepfakes circulated online, Liz Kendall said X, Musk’s social media platform, needed to “deal with this urgently” and she backed the UK regulator Ofcom to “take any enforcement action it deems necessary”.“We cannot and will not allow the proliferation of these demeaning and degrading images, which are disproportionately aimed at women and girls,” she said.“Make no mistake, the UK will not tolerate the endless proliferation of disgusting and abusive material online.We must all come together to stamp it out.

”Her comments came amid warnings that the Online Safety Act, which aims to tackle online harms and protect children, needs to be urgently toughened up despite pressure from the Trump administration to water it down.One expert criticised the “tennis game” between platforms such as X and UK regulators when problems arose and called the government response “worryingly slow”.Jessaline Caine, a survivor of child sexual abuse, called the government’s response “spineless” and told the Guardian that on Tuesday morning the chatbot was still obeying requests to manipulate an image of her as a three-year-old to dress her in a string bikini.Her identical requests made to ChatGPT and Gemini were rejected.“Other platforms have these safeguards so why does Grok allow the creation of these images?” she said.

“The images I’ve seen are so vile and degrading.The government has been very reactive.These AI tools need better regulation.”On Monday, Ofcom said it was aware of serious concerns raised about Grok creating undressed images of people and sexualised images of children.It said it had contacted X and xAI “to understand what steps they have taken to comply with their legal duties to protect users in the UK” and would assess the need for an investigation based on the company’s response.

The pressure is growing on ministers to take a tougher line,The crossbench peer and online child safety campaigner Beeban Kidron has urged the government to “show some backbone” and called for the Online Safety Act regime to be “reassessed so it is swifter and has more teeth”,Speaking about X, she said: “If any other consumer product caused this level of harm, it would already have been recalled,”She said Ofcom needed to act “in days not years” and called for users to walk “away from products that show no serious intent to prevent harm to children, women and democracy”,Ofcom has powers to fine tech platforms up to £18m or 10% of their qualifying global revenues, whichever is higher.

The biggest penalty to date came last month when a porn provider that failed to carry out mandatory age checks was fined £1m.Last month, ministers promised new laws to ban “nudification” tools, which use generative AI to turn images of real people into fake nude pictures and videos without their permission.It remains unclear when that ban will be enforced.Sarah Smith, the innovation lead at the Lucy Faithfull Foundation, a charity that works to prevent child abuse, called for X to immediately disable Grok’s image-editing features “until robust safeguards are in place to stop this from happening again”.X did not respond to a request for comment on Kendall’s remarks.

It said on Monday: “We take action against illegal content on X, including child sexual abuse material, by removing it, permanently suspending accounts and working with local governments and law enforcement as necessary.”Jake Moore, a global cybersecurity adviser at at the security software firm ESET, criticised the “tennis game” between platforms such as X and UK regulators and called the government response “worryingly slow”.He said that as AI increasingly allowed faked images to be rendered as longer videos, the consequences for people’s lives would only become worse.“It is unbelievable that this is able to occur in 2026,” he said.“We have to move forward with extreme regulation.

Any grey area we offer will be abused.The government is not understanding the bigger picture here.”It is already illegal to create or share non-consensual intimate images or child sexual abuse material, including sexual deepfakes created with AI.Fake images of people in bikinis may qualify as intimate images, as the definition in law includes the person having naked breasts, buttocks or genitals or having those parts only covered by underwear.Indecent images include those depicting children in erotic poses without sexual activity.

Lady Kidron said AI-generated pictures of children in bikinis may not be child sexual abuse material but they were contemptuous of children’s privacy and agency.“We cannot live in a world in which a kid can’t post a picture of winning a race unless they are willing to be sexualised and humiliated,” she said.
cultureSee all
A picture

Kimmel on Trump’s whitewashing of January 6 anniversary: ‘Don’t give in to this revisionist history’

Late-night hosts observed the fifth anniversary of the January 6 insurrection and recapped Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro’s first day in a US court.Jimmy Kimmel opened his monologue on Tuesday, 6 January, with an acknowledgment of the date: “Five years ago today, after losing what eventually judges from both sides in cities all around the country unanimously declared to be a free and fair election, Donald Trump tried to overthrow our government in a pathetic and illegal attempt to stay in the White House,” he said. “And there’s no other way to put it. You cannot look at the facts objectively and come to any conclusion other than that.“He tried to force the vice-president to claim voter fraud and refuse to certify Joe Biden’s victory, which even his own vice-president refused to do,” he continued

1 day ago
A picture

Dolly, Dreamgirls and Daniel Radcliffe: the biggest Broadway shows of 2026

The year 2025 found Broadway at an inflection point – New York theater finally fully rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, as the 2024-2025 season became the highest-grossing of all time, with $1.89bn in tickets sold thanks in part to a new generation of stars and fans. But with a record box office came record ticket prices, as Hollywood stars from Denzel Washington to George Clooney commanded sums pushing four figures for orchestra seating. This year feels relatively less Hollywood-y, though no less starry, with a healthy mix of revivals, new material and buzzy transfers on the calendar. Here are 12 of the most anticipated Broadway shows in 2026

1 day ago
A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump’s military intervention in Venezuela: ‘This is all exhausting’

Late-night hosts tore into the Trump administration’s surprise military attack on Caracas, capture of president Nicolás Maduro and vague plans to “run” Venezuela.Jon Stewart wasted no time in his first Daily Show appearance of 2026, immediately digging into Donald Trump’s shock decision to remove Maduro from power in the early hours of 2 January, which more than a dozen countries condemned as a “crime of aggression” to the UN.“Now, obviously, this is actually a very fraught moment for the world,” he said on Monday evening. “It is highly unusual for any government, any sovereign nation, to violate the airspace and territory of another sovereign nation and hit the grab and go on their president.“Look, no one knows how this operation is gonna work out,” he added

2 days ago
A picture

‘I wanted that Raiders of the Lost Ark excitement – you could die any minute’: how we made hit video game Prince of Persia

Programming was very open back in the 1980s. You had to teach yourself, either from magazines, or by swapping tips. When you wrote a video game, you submitted it on a floppy disk to a publisher, like a book manuscript. In my freshman year at Yale university, I sent Deathbounce, an Asteroids-esque game for the Apple II computer, to Broderbund, my favourite games company. They rejected it, but took my next effort, Karateka, a side-scrolling beat-’em-up

3 days ago
A picture

The Guide #224: Bondage Bronte, to more comeback tours – what will be 2026’s big cultural hitters ?

Welcome to 2026! I hope you are enjoying the final dribblings of the festive break, before reality bites on Monday. As is now tradition (well, we did it once before), this first newsletter of the new year looks at some of the big questions we hope will be answered in the next 12 months, across film, TV, music and games. Hopefully it will double up as a decent primer for the year ahead too, though for a more exhaustive rundown check the Guardian’s 2026 previews for film, music, TV, gaming, stage and art. Right, let’s get on with it:A storyline likely to rumble on through the year is the proposed purchase of Warner Bros by Netflix, which will require government approval (certainly not a given), not to mention all manner of contractual fine-tuning, before that big red N gets stamped on Warners’ famous water tower. Just enough time then for Hollywood’s greatest wrangler of spectacle, and newly installed head of the Director’s Guild, Christopher Nolan to demonstrate the value to Netflix of putting mass-market movies on the biggest screens possible

6 days ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: I May Destroy You helped me confront being spiked

When I May Destroy You aired in the summer of 2020, I hadn’t yet been spiked. Michaela Coel’s comedy-drama, based on her own experience of sexual assault, follows Arabella (Coel) as she realises she was drugged and raped on a night out. With one in four women in Britain having experienced sexual violence, the 12-part series was a difficult watch for many. If not relatable, then confronting and familiar; something that had happened to others, but close enough to know that it could happen to you. Three months later, it did happen to me

6 days ago
businessSee all
A picture

Pub chain shares rise on reports of government U-turn over business rates – as it happened

about 11 hours ago
A picture

Tesco aiming for bumper 2026 after best Christmas market share in decade

about 12 hours ago
A picture

CMA begins full review of Kingsmill owner’s planned takeover of bread rival Hovis

about 13 hours ago
A picture

Greggs puts up price of sausage roll by 5p to £1.35 amid rising costs

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Trump plans to use Venezuela’s huge crude reserves ‘to cut US oil price to $50 a barrel’

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Tunbridge Wells residents without water again as supplier blames cold weather

about 17 hours ago