Tech
French Families Sue TikTok Over Harmful Content Exposure
Seven French families are suing TikTok, accusing the popular social media platform of exposing their children to harmful content that contributed to severe consequences, including two teenagers taking their own lives. The case, filed in the Créteil judicial court, claims TikTok’s algorithm promoted content related to self-harm, eating disorders, and suicide, according to Laure Boutron-Marmion, the families’ lawyer.
Boutron-Marmion described the lawsuit as the first of its kind in Europe and stated that the families aim to hold TikTok legally accountable for the content their platform failed to moderate. “This is a commercial company offering a product to consumers who are, in addition, minors. They must, therefore, answer for the product’s shortcomings,” she explained to French media.
One of the tragic cases involves Marie, a 15-year-old who took her own life in 2021. Her mother has argued that TikTok’s exposure to dangerous video content was a significant factor leading to Marie’s death. The ongoing criminal complaint filed last year by Marie’s parents remains separate from the current group lawsuit.
Another teenager involved in the case also died by suicide. Four of the remaining five young women reportedly attempted suicide, with at least one developing an eating disorder after engaging with content on the platform.
TikTok has responded, stating that it has not received any notifications of legal proceedings related to these allegations. The company emphasized its community guidelines, which prohibit content promoting self-harm or suicide, and highlighted its use of technology and human moderators to enforce these standards.
Despite TikTok’s claims of rigorous safety measures, the social media giant has faced increasing scrutiny for its content moderation practices, echoing concerns raised about the impact of social networks on vulnerable youth.
Tech
OpenAI Revises Pentagon AI Deal After Backlash Over Military Use
OpenAI says it is amending its recent agreement with the United States Department of Defense following criticism over the potential use of its technology in classified military operations.
Chief executive Sam Altman announced that the company will insert clearer restrictions into the contract, explicitly prohibiting the intentional use of its systems for domestic surveillance of US citizens and nationals.
The controversy emerged after tensions between OpenAI’s rival Anthropic and the Pentagon, related to concerns that Anthropic’s AI model, Claude, could be used for mass surveillance or in fully autonomous weapons systems.
In a statement over the weekend, OpenAI said its Pentagon agreement contained “more guardrails than any previous agreement for classified AI deployments”. However, Altman later acknowledged that the rollout of the deal had been rushed.
“The issues are super complex, and demand clear communication,” he wrote on social media, adding that the company had sought to de-escalate tensions but recognised that the announcement appeared “opportunistic and sloppy”.
Under the revised terms, intelligence agencies such as the National Security Agency would require additional contractual modifications before being permitted to use OpenAI systems.
The backlash has had measurable effects. Reports indicate that day-over-day uninstalls of the ChatGPT mobile app surged sharply following the announcement, while Anthropic’s Claude climbed to the top of Apple’s App Store rankings.
Anthropic’s model had previously been blacklisted by the administration of Donald Trump after the company refused to abandon a corporate principle barring the use of its technology in fully autonomous weapons. Despite that position, reports have since indicated that Claude was used in the US-Israel conflict with Iran shortly after the ban.
The Pentagon has declined to comment on its arrangements with Anthropic.
Tech
X to stop Grok AI from undressing images of real people
X has announced that its artificial intelligence tool, Grok, will no longer be able to edit images of real people to depict them in revealing clothing in jurisdictions where such activity is illegal, following widespread backlash over the misuse of sexualised AI deepfakes.
In a statement published on the platform, X said it had introduced new safeguards to prevent the Grok account from being used to manipulate photos of real individuals in a sexualised manner. “We have implemented technological measures to prevent the Grok account from allowing the editing of images of real people in revealing clothing,” the company said.
The move has been welcomed by UK authorities, who had previously raised concerns about the tool’s use. The UK government described the decision as a “vindication” of its calls for X to take stronger action to control Grok. Media regulator Ofcom also said the change was a “welcome development”, while stressing that its investigation into whether the platform breached UK laws is still under way.
“We are working round the clock to progress this and get answers into what went wrong and what’s being done to fix it,” Ofcom said, signalling continued scrutiny despite the latest measures.
Technology Secretary Liz Kendall welcomed X’s announcement but emphasised the need for accountability. She said she would “expect the facts to be fully and robustly established by Ofcom’s ongoing investigation”, underlining the government’s commitment to ensuring online safety rules are upheld.
However, campaigners and victims of AI-generated sexualised images say the decision has come after significant harm had already been caused. Journalist and campaigner Jess Davies, who was among women whose images were edited using Grok, described the changes as a “positive step” but said the feature should never have been permitted in the first place.
Tech
Alibaba Opens AI Video Generation Model for Free Use Globally
Chinese tech giant Alibaba has made its latest AI video generation models freely available worldwide, intensifying competition with rivals such as OpenAI.
The company announced on Wednesday that it is open-sourcing four models from its Wan2.1 series, its most advanced AI model capable of generating images and videos from text and image inputs. These models will be accessible via Alibaba Cloud’s Model Scope and Hugging Face, making them available to academics, researchers, and businesses globally.
Following the announcement, Alibaba’s Hong Kong-listed shares surged nearly 5%, continuing a strong rally that has seen the stock gain 66% in 2025. Investors have been optimistic about the company’s growing role in AI and its improving financial performance, buoyed by recent policy signals from Chinese President Xi Jinping supporting the domestic private sector.
Alibaba’s move aligns with a broader trend in China, where companies are increasingly embracing open-source AI. In January, DeepSeek, another Chinese firm, shook global markets by revealing that its AI model was trained at a fraction of the cost of competitors, using less-advanced Nvidia chips. Both Alibaba’s and DeepSeek’s models are open-source, meaning they can be downloaded and modified freely, unlike proprietary AI models such as those developed by OpenAI, which generate direct revenue.
The shift towards open-source AI has sparked debate over whether AI models will become commoditized. While companies like Meta are leading the open-source push in the U.S. with their Llama models, Chinese firms have been particularly aggressive in this space, aiming to drive innovation and build global AI communities.
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