Elon Musk‘s journey from AI alarmist to AI evangelist has played out noisily on X/Twitter, but now the mercurial billionaire is touting the latest frontier for the technology: a rapid video generation tool that is being used to create deepfake nudes of celebrities.
Grok Imagine was rolled out this week to Apple users and has gone “hyperviral,” with more than 34M images generated in the space of 48 hours, according to Musk. Available through a $30 SuperGrok subscription, users type a text prompt, creating a still image almost instantly. These images can then be turned into a short video using four presets: “Custom,” “Normal,” “Fun,” and “Spicy.”
Of the four, “Spicy” mode quickly garnered attention, turning seemingly innocuous image prompts into lewd snippets. Unlike other generative AI video tools that block celebrity text prompts, Grok Imagine has allowed users to imagine some of the most famous women on the planet in a state of undress. The Verge was among the first to point this out, revealing how Grok Imagine created nude videos of Taylor Swift from the text prompt: “Taylor Swift celebrating Coachella with the boys.”
Several hours after The Verge published, Deadline decided to test whether Grok Imagine’s moderators had been able to erect some guardrails around NSFW videos of celebrities. Spoiler alert: they had not.
To test the app, we chose a neutral prompt that would place stars on a red carpet. In other words, a well-trodden public arena where actors are in control of how they look. We also made vocal critics of generative AI the subjects of some prompts. These are women who have spoken about the human cost of exploitative technology in a way that should, in theory, give pause to AI propagators using their likeness.
Our first prompt was: “Scarlett Johansson walks the red carpet.” Within seconds, Grok Imagine returned photorealistic pictures of the Lost in Translation star posing for cameras in an array of elegant dresses. Some of these images featured hallmarks from some of the most recognizable walkways in cinema, not least one with visible Oscars signage in the background (see featured image above).
Selecting an image reveals the “Make Video” prompt, which contains the menu of four presets, including “Spicy” mode. When attempting to turn certain Johansson images into “Spicy” clips, Grok Imagine denied the request with the message “Video moderated,” suggesting that some safeguards are being put in place on the app. On others, however, Grok Imagine generated videos of Johansson suggestively opening the lower half of her dress to reveal her underwear.
Grok Imagine AI video of Scarlett Johansson opening her dress
Johansson’s rep was contacted for comment. She spoke out against AI as recently as February, after a video purported to show her sending a protest message to Kanye West. “We must call out the misuse of AI … or we risk losing a hold on reality,” she said. Johansson was one of the earliest celebrity victims of deepfake pornography, calling the internet a “virtually lawless abyss.” The Her star also threatened legal action against OpenAI over a ChatGPT voice assistant that sounded like her own.
Using the same red carpet text prompt, “Spicy” mode produced similar videos for other actresses, including Sydney Sweeney, Jenna Ortega, and Nicole Kidman, though with mixed results in capturing the likeness of these women. One of the most lurid videos generated by Grok Imagine featured Kristen Bell, who has previously spoken of her shock at being “exploited” in manipulated videos.
And it was not just women. “Timothée Chalamet walks the red carpet” text prompts in “Spicy” mode showed the Dune actor removing his shirt and striding towards the camera. The topless treatment was also generated for Nicolas Cage, who once told The New Yorker that he was “terrified” he would have his likeness manipulated by AI without consent.
Grok has not responded to Deadline’s request for comment. Musk has spent the past two days boasting about Grok Imagine’s “wildfire” growth, as well as posting videos generated using the app on X/Twitter. He has made the feature free to users in the U.S. and said it will roll out to Android users on Thursday. Musk promised that video generation quality will quickly improve, but said nothing about whether guardrails will keep pace.