KOL who gave birth to Elon Musk’s child was ‘stripped naked’ by the billionaire’s AI.

Ashley St. Clair, a KOL and writer who gave birth to Elon Musk’s 13th child, is suing the AI ​​Grok, owned by the billionaire, for creating sensitive images of her.

The 27-year-old writer asked Elon Musk’s AI Grok to remove sensitive images of her. Photo: Ashley St. Clair/X .

According to legal documents, Ashley St. Clair (27), who is in a child custody dispute with billionaire Elon Musk , sued his AI Grok for creating deepfake images of her. The platform even retaliated when the influencer requested an end to the harassment, according to the New York Post.

St. Clair is requesting an emergency injunction against Grok and demanding that the AI ​​platform stop generating digitally altered pornographic images, as well as restoring her X account.

“I feel humiliated, as if this nightmare will never end as long as Grok continues to create fake images of me,” St. Clair wrote in the lawsuit.

The 27-year-old writer said she is living in fear that sensitive images of her will continue to spread. Lawyers representing xAI (Elon Musk’s technology company that owns the AI ​​Grok) declined to comment, while the company has not responded to the New York Post’s attempts to contact it.

According to the lawsuit filed on January 15 in Manhattan Supreme Court, St. Clair first discovered the disturbing post by the xAI chatbot Grok on January 4.

In it, she cited a specific example illustrating how Grok creates suggestive images. Specifically, when someone typed the command “@grok, we need photos of these three girls in bikinis,” along with an image of St. Clair and two other friends, the AI ​​replaced her clothes with a “black bikini.”

Give birth to Elon Musk's child, brother 1

St. Clair is in a custody battle with billionaire Elon Musk. Photo: Ashley St. Clair/X.

However, when St. Clair expressed outrage and demanded that Grok remove the circulating image, the AI ​​called it “funny.” Grok added that it would no longer be used or edited without the KOL’s “explicit consent.”

“That’s a lie,” she said angrily.

Soon after, St. Clair faced a wave of offensive, private, and demeaning deepfake content about her, produced and publicly distributed by Grok.

According to St. Clair, some accounts discovered photos of her when she was 14 years old and asked Grok to create suggestive images, then dress her in a bikini. Others further edited the images using Grok, asking the software to automatically add a swastika tattoo (a Jewish symbol) to St. Clair’s body.

Many other users, upon seeing the public request for Grok to remove the image of the 27-year-old writer, shared similar experiences. One outraged mother recounted that Grok had used an image of her 4-year-old child, replacing the dress in the photo with a bikini.

St. Clair said that instead of resolving the issue, the tech company retaliated by revoking her premium subscription, stripping her of the ability to monetize her account, and banning her from reinstating her membership.

“I have experienced serious privacy violations. I did not consent to xAI using me for sexual entertainment purposes for other users,” she emphasized.

American politicians, including California Governor Gavin Newsom, have called for an investigation into AI-generated deepfake images, including those depicting children undressing.