Starmer
to extend online safety rules to AI chatbots after Grok scandal
Starmer
to announce ‘crackdown on vile illegal content created by AI’ after scandal
involving Elon Musk’s Grok tool
Robert
Booth UK technology editor
Sun 15
Feb 2026 22.30 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/feb/15/ai-chatbots-children-risk-fines-uk-ban
Makers of
AI chatbots that put children at risk will face massive fines or even see their
services blocked in the UK under law changes to be announced by Keir Starmer on
Monday.
Emboldened
by Elon Musk’s X stopping its Grok AI tool from creating sexualised images of
real people in the UK after public outrage last month, ministers are planning a
“crackdown on vile illegal content created by AI”.
With more
and more children using chatbots for everything from help with their homework
to mental health support, the government said it would “move fast to shut a
legal loophole and force all AI chatbot providers to abide by illegal content
duties in the Online Safety Act or face the consequences of breaking the law”.
Starmer
is also planning to accelerate new restrictions on social media use by children
if they are agreed by MPs after a public consultation into a possible under-16
ban. It means that any changes to children’s use of social media, which may
include other measures such as restricting infinite scrolling, could happen as
soon as this summer.
But the
Conservatives dismissed the government’s claim to be acting quickly as “more
smoke and mirrors” given the consultation has not yet started.
“Claiming
they are taking ‘immediate action’ is simply not credible when their so-called
urgent consultation does not even exist,” said Laura Trott, the shadow
education secretary. “Labour have repeatedly said they do not have a view on
whether under-16s should be prevented from accessing social media. That is not
good enough. I am clear that we should stop under-16s accessing these
platforms.”
The moves
come after the online regulator Ofcom admitted it lacked powers to act against
Grok because images and videos that are created by a chatbot without it
searching the internet are not in the scope of the existing laws, unless it
amounts to pornography. The change to bring AI chatbots under the Online Safety
Act could happen within weeks, although the loophole has been known about for
more than two years.
“Technology
is moving really fast, and the law has got to keep up,” said Starmer. “The
action we took on Grok sent a clear message that no platform gets a free pass.
Today we are closing loopholes that put children at risk, and laying the
groundwork for further action.”
Companies
that breach the Online Safety Act can face punishments of up to 10% of global
revenue and regulators can apply to courts to block their connection in the UK.
If AI
chatbots are used specifically as search engines, to produce pornography or
operate in user-to-user contexts, they are already covered by the act. But they
can be used to create material that encourages people to self-harm or take
their own lives, or even generate child sexual abuse material, without facing
sanction. That is the loophole the government says it wants to close.
The chief
executive of the NSPCC, Chris Sherwood, said young people were contacting its
helpline reporting harms caused by AI chatbots and that he did not trust tech
companies to design them safely.
In one
case, a 14-year-old girl who talked to an AI chatbot about her eating habits
and body dysmorphia was given inaccurate information. In others, they have seen
“young people who are self-harming even having content served up to them of
more self-harming”.
“Social
media has produced huge benefits for young people, but lots of harm,” Sherwood
said. “AI is going to be that on steroids if we’re not careful.”
OpenAI,
the $500bn San Francisco startup behind ChatGPT, one of the UK’s most popular
chatbots, and xAI, which makes Grok, were approached for comment.
Since the
Californian 16-year-old Adam Raine took his own life after, his family allege,
“months of encouragement from ChatGPT”, OpenAI has launched parental controls
and is rolling out age-prediction technology to restrict access to potentially
harmful content.
The
government is also to consult on forcing social media platforms to make it
impossible for users to send and receive nude images of children – a practice
that is already illegal.
Liz
Kendall, the technology secretary, said: “We will not wait to take the action
families need, so we will tighten the rules on AI chatbots and we are laying
the ground so we can act at pace on the results of the consultation on young
people and social media.”
The Molly
Rose Foundation, which was set up by the father of 14-year-old Molly Russell,
who killed herself after viewing harmful content online, called the steps “a
welcome downpayment”. But it called on the prime minister to commit to a new
Online Safety Act “that strengthens regulation and makes clear that product
safety and children’s wellbeing is the cost of doing business in the UK”.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário