Centre Flags X Over AI Misuse: Meity Seeks Compliance Report On Obscene Content Via Grok
The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has written a formal letter to X Corp (formerly Twitter), raising serious concerns over the misuse of artificial intelligence tools such as Grok and other services linked to xAI.
The letter, dated January 2, 2026, was sent to the Chief Compliance Officer of X Corp, India Operations. In it, the ministry said X has failed to meet its legal duties under Indian law to prevent the spread of obscene, nude, indecent, and sexually explicit content on its platform.
MeitY has asked X to submit an Action Taken Report and ensure immediate compliance with existing digital safety laws.
Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology writes a letter to the Chief Compliance Officer of X Corp. (formerly Twitter) over the failure to observe statutory due diligence obligations under the Information Technology Act, 2000 and the Information Technology (Intermediary... twitter/lpXNweaTxz
- ANI (@ANI) January 2, 2026
In the letter, MeitY said it has received repeated complaints from parliamentary stakeholders and members of the public. These complaints claim that certain content on X violates Indian laws related to decency and online safety.
The ministry said that the AI service Grok, developed by xAI and integrated into X, is allegedly being misused to create fake accounts and generate obscene images and videos. Some of this content reportedly targets women using vulgar language, derogatory images, and AI-generated prompts.
The government warned that such misuse reflects a serious failure of platform-level safeguards and content moderation systems.
Women and children at risk, says MeitY
MeitY said the spread of such content directly affects the dignity, privacy, and safety of women and children. The letter highlighted concerns about sexual harassment, digital exploitation, and harm caused by AI-generated synthetic content.
The ministry stated that allowing such material to circulate weakens India's digital safety framework and violates the legal responsibilities of social media intermediaries operating in the country.
Laws and rules cited in the notice
The government said X is required to follow the Information Technology Act, 2000, and the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021.
The letter clearly states that compliance with these laws is not optional.
MeitY listed several key rules that X must follow, including:
- Rule 4(1): Providing information and Action Taken Reports when asked Rule 4(1)(a): Appointment of a Chief Compliance Officer responsible for legal compliance Rules 3(1)(b) and 3(1)(d): Preventing and removing unlawful content quickly Rule 3(1)(i): Assisting law enforcement agencies when required Rule 3(2): Having systems to handle complaints and grievances Rule 3(2)(b): Removing prima facie sexual or impersonation content within 24 hours
The ministry also reminded X about an earlier advisory issued on December 29, 2025. That advisory had clearly instructed all intermediaries to review their internal compliance systems, content moderation practices, and user enforcement tools.
MeitY said X had already been warned to ensure strict and continuous compliance with Indian law, especially when AI tools are involved.
Serious legal consequences warned
The government stressed that hosting or sharing obscene or sexually explicit content can lead to punishment under several Indian laws. These include:
- Sections 66E, 67, 67A, and 67B of the IT Act Provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 The Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act, 1986 The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 The Young Persons (Harmful Publications) Act, 1956
The letter warned that companies can also face penalties under Section 85 of the IT Act for failing to follow rules.
Focus on AI responsibility
MeitY made it clear that the use of AI does not reduce responsibility. Instead, platforms must take extra care to ensure AI tools are not used to spread harmful or illegal content.
The ministry said AI-generated content that invades privacy or dignity is just as illegal as content created by humans.
X has been asked to respond with a detailed Action Taken Report and take immediate corrective steps. The ministry said further action may follow if compliance gaps are not addressed. The letter marks one of the strongest warnings yet by the Indian government on the misuse of AI in social media spaces.
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