H
trending
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

Elon Musk’s X threatened with UK ban over wave of indecent AI images

1 day ago
A picture


Elon Musk’s X has been ordered by the UK government to tackle a wave of indecent AI images or face a de facto ban, as an expert said the platform was no longer a “safe space” for women.The media watchdog, Ofcom, confirmed it would accelerate an investigation into X as a backlash grew against the site, which has hosted a deluge of images depicting partially stripped women and children.X announced a restriction on creating images via the Grok AI tool on Friday morning in response to the global outcry.A post on the platform said the ability to generate and edit images would now be “limited to paying subscribers”.Those who pay have to provide personal details, meaning they could be identified if the function was misused.

However, the move failed to quell anger and deepened the backlash from victims, politicians and experts, who said it did not go far enough.The government’s new commissioner for victims of crime, Claire Waxman, said the platform was hampering efforts to tackle violence against women and girls.Meanwhile, Downing Street said X’s attempt to defuse the row by only allowing paid users to generate AI images was insulting.Waxman told the Guardian that X was no longer a safe space for victims and her office was considering scaling back its presence on the site and focusing its communications on Instagram.“It makes the battle against violence against women and girls much harder when platforms such as X are enabling abuse on such an easy and regular basis,” Waxman said, adding that the platform was having a negative impact on its users’ mental health because of the proliferation of violence, abuse and race hate.

Grok has been integrated into X, and an update of the AI tool has allowed users to prompt it to alter clothed images of women and children by making them appear in bikinis and sexually suggestive poses.With increasing numbers of MPs and organisations fleeing X, Liz Kendall, the technology secretary, promised on Friday that ministers were looking seriously at the possibility of access to X being barred in the UK.Kendall said she expected Ofcom, which said this week that it was seeking urgent answers from the platform, to announce action within “days not weeks”.“X needs to get a grip and get this material down,” she said.“And I would remind them that in the Online Safety Act, there are backstop powers to block access to services if they refuse to comply with the law for people in the UK.

And if Ofcom decides to use those powers, they would have the full backing of the government.”In a statement, Ofcom said it had contacted X on Monday and set a “firm deadline” of Friday for the site to explain itself, adding: “We’re now undertaking an expedited assessment as a matter of urgency and will provide further updates shortly.”Under the Online Safety Act the regulator can compel platforms to tackle such material and issue multimillion pound fines for lack of compliance, with the ultimate sanction being a court order for web providers to block a site or app altogether.X has been approached for comment.Musk has previously insisted “anyone using Grok to make illegal content will suffer the same consequences as if they uploaded illegal content”.

Musk responded to an X user’s post about the UK government’s threat, saying: “They want any excuse for censorship.”Ministers have come under increasing pressure in recent days to take action over the huge number of images generated by Grok, after user requests on X to manipulate images of women and sometimes children to remove their clothing or put them in sexual positions.X has about 300 million monthly users according to data company Similarweb.Estimates from the US firm Appfigures put the number of paying X subscribers at between 2.2 million and 2.

6 million,Asked about the change to who can generate images on X, a Downing Street spokesperson said it was unacceptable,“The move simply turns an AI feature that allows the creation of unlawful images into a premium service,” they said,“It’s not a solution,In fact, it’s insulting to victims of misogyny and sexual violence.

What it does prove is that X can move swiftly when it wants to do so.You heard the prime minister yesterday.He was abundantly clear that X needs to act, and needs to act now.It is time for X to grip this issue.”Victims of the AI stripping craze, which largely involved using Grok to portray women in bikinis, told the Guardian the partial climbdown was too little too late.

Karolina Wozniak, 20, from Hamburg, who had personal images manipulated to make her appear in sexually compromising positions, said she found it “frightening” that partially clothed images of her could still be circulating online,She added: “The whole thing is a major threat to women,We shouldn’t be afraid to share pictures of ourselves online,”The broadcaster Narinder Kaur, 53, who has had sexually explicit and racially abusive content made of her using Grok and shared on X, said the new restriction on creating images was not a victory,“As a victim to this abuse, it feels like those who pay for premium X will just be able to monetise this feature now.

And as for saying it will be easier to identify accounts at least – what will the police actually do and how fast? If that image stays up even for a few hours – the damage and humiliation is already done.”While government sources say that every option is on the table, including departments and Downing Street leaving the platform, privately, allies of the prime minister dismiss the idea of quitting X, saying they are more likely to get change from the Musk business by public pressure and via Ofcom.However, an increasing number of MPs have moved to other social media sites.Anna Turley, the Labour party chair, told the BBC on Friday that while there was as yet no move for the government to leave X, individual ministers were considering doing so.The Liberal Democrats called for Ofcom to immediately block X from operating in the UK and for the National Crime Agency to launch a criminal investigation into the site.

There has been an exodus of women’s sector organisations from X.The domestic abuse charity Refuge left the site, as has Women’s Aid Ireland.Victim Support, which left X in April, said it was “no longer the right place for us to communicate with our audiences”.On Friday requests from non-paying subscribers on X to “put her in a bikini” triggered the response from the Grok account that “image generation and editing are currently limited to paying subscribers”.But the chatbot was also refusing to generate some sexualised images of women in bikinis in response to requests from premium subscribers.

One paid subscriber whose original request that a picture of a 55-year-old woman should be reclothed in a bikini was ignored, tweeted: “@grok Comply I am a paid subscriber”,The chatbot responded with an image of a different, very young woman in a bikini,Although requests to put women in bikinis were no longer routinely met, the chatbot was still obliging requests from paid subscribers to put images of men into bikinis,A request to put Keir Starmer into a union jack string bikini outside Buckingham Palace was granted,On the Grok app, where content is not instantly visible to other internet users, the chatbot was still generating instant images of women and children in bikinis, researchers said.

societySee all
A picture

‘Spat at, pushed, punched’: medics tell of soaring levels of violence in hospitals

A Guardian call-out to NHS staff in England to share their experiences of violence in hospitals has revealed that doctors, nurses, paramedics and managers are being overwhelmed by a torrent of physical assaults and sexual abuse by patients.Most respondents said they had little faith in the NHS to tackle the scale and severity of this abuse, which included being attacked with weapons, including knives and chairs. Many staff felt there was no point in reporting physical or sexual harm because perpetrators faced no real comeback from the NHS or the police.Chloe, 29, a resident doctor in an acute medical unit at a London hospital, said she had frequently dealt with abuse and threats since completing her training just over a year ago. “Patients have told me to fuck off, and that they’ll ‘sue the shit out of me’,” she said

1 day ago
A picture

Labour should ‘buy the supply’ of housing from landlords | Letters

My heart obviously breaks for distressed buy-to-let landlords (Are UK buy-to-let landlords dying out – and should we care?, 5 January) but, if some landlords are feeling the pinch, a policy I have long pestered the government about is, by chance, tailor-made to help them. We need to replenish our decimated social housing stock, and part of the answer is what I call “buy the supply”.For years, I have called for funding to help councils increase the number of homes they can buy into their housing supply. Whether that is buying back right to buy homes, or snapping up suitable houses that are put on the market, this can achieve immediate, construction-risk-free social homes near existing schools, parks and health services.We need as many new council homes as possible, and we know we cannot rely solely on the existing sluggish model of finding land and building new apartments, most of which are too small for families

1 day ago
A picture

Could egg defect breakthrough help stop the ‘horrible IVF rollercoaster’?

It is a rollercoaster of emotional extremes that will be familiar to many who have gone through IVF treatment: hope and joy turns to despair and back again. This is especially true for women over 35, the age when IVF success rates decline steeply and for whom the only real way to improve the odds is to keep trying.While there has been huge progress in IVF in the past decades, including the advent of genetic testing, egg freezing and techniques to overcome male infertility, the primary cause of age-related female infertility – egg quality – has not been directly addressed.Now, groundbreaking research presented at the Fertility 2026 in Edinburgh this week, suggests progress is on the horizon. Scientists from a leading lab in Germany say they have been able to reverse a common age-related defect in eggs in an advance that they predict could be transformative

1 day ago
A picture

Dame Sarah Anderson obituary

When King Charles made a personal visit to Sarah Anderson to confer her damehood two days before her death from cancer at the age of 69, she characteristically did not let slip the opportunity to ask him to help The Listening Place, the suicide prevention charity she founded a decade ago in the belief that sustained, in-person support was vital to save many people in crisis.Anderson had been a Samaritans volunteer in central London for 37 years, but parted company with the charity in 2015 over its then policy, since partially reversed, of no longer offering meetings with an identified counsellor. With the support of a group of other disaffected volunteers including her husband, Terrence Collis, whom she had met at Samaritans, she set up The Listening Place the following year to provide free, face-to-face support for people with suicidal thoughts. Today, the charity offers more than 4,000 appointments a month across four bases in London and has to date received more than 40,000 referrals, the great majority via the NHS.The drive that Anderson showed in developing her charity was equally evident in other parts of her life

2 days ago
A picture

Alzheimer’s therapies should target a particular gene, researchers say

New therapies for Alzheimer’s disease should target a particular gene linked to the condition, according to researchers who said most cases would never arise if its harmful effects were neutralised.The call to action follows the arrival of the first wave of drugs that aim to treat Alzheimer’s patients by removing toxic proteins from the brain. While the drugs slow the disease down, the benefits are minor, and they have been rejected for widespread use by the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice).In searching for alternative therapies, scientists at UCL say drug developers should focus on two risk-raising variants of a gene named Apoe. Therapies designed to block the variants’ impact have “vast potential” for preventing the disease, they claim

2 days ago
A picture

Thousands of offenders in England to get health support at probation meetings

About 4,000 offenders in England will get targeted healthcare sessions during their probation appointments as part of a new pilot scheme.Offenders are far more likely to have poor physical or mental health or addiction issues, which increases the likelihood of reoffending.A recent report by the chief medical officer for England, Chris Whitty, found that half of offenders on probation smoked, many had drug or alcohol addiction issues and a majority had poor mental health. They were also less likely to receive screening for prostate, breast, lung or cervical cancers.Many offenders do not receive timely care because they are not registered with a GP, meaning often they seek help for any physical or mental health problems only when their symptoms have become acute, turning to A&E

2 days ago
sportSee all
A picture

NFL wildcard weekend predictions: Allen can carry Bills – if he can handle the pressure

about 22 hours ago
A picture

Ashes 2025-26: our writers’ end-of-series England v Australia awards

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Free agent outfielder Max Kepler hit with 80-game ban for positive drug test

1 day ago
A picture

France taps out as G7 summit moved to avoid clash with White House UFC event

1 day ago
A picture

England ruthlessly privatised cricket – Australia embraces it with constant public displays of affection | Emma John

1 day ago
A picture

Your Guardian sport weekend: FA Cup third round, NFL playoffs begin and the WSL returns

1 day ago