California regulators have intensified scrutiny of xAI, ordering the company to halt the creation of nonconsensual sexual imagery generated by its Grok chatbot, while Elon Musk simultaneously escalates a high-stakes lawsuit against OpenAIand Microsoft that could reshape the AI industry’s governance debate.
The California Attorney General’s Office, led by Rob Bonta, confirmed it is investigating xAI for allegedly enabling the large-scale production of deepfake, nonconsensual intimate images, including material involving minors. The state has issued a cease-and-desist letter demanding immediate action and evidence within days that xAI has stopped the creation and distribution of such content. The probe follows similar investigations in the U.K., Canada, and Japan, while Malaysia and Indonesia have temporarily blocked Grok, citing concerns over its explicit image-generation features.
Separately, Musk is seeking between $79 billion and $134 billion in damages from OpenAI and Microsoft, arguing the company abandoned its nonprofit mission after he co-founded it in 2015. His damages claim is based on expert analysis attributing OpenAI’s current valuation growth to Musk’s early funding and technical contributions, while also asserting Microsoft benefited from the alleged breach.
The parallel developments highlight growing regulatory and legal pressure on frontier AI developers as governments move to curb misuse and founders clash over control, ethics, and the future direction of artificial intelligence.




