French officials escalated their investigation into Elon Musk’s platform X on Tuesday, raiding the company’s Paris offices and summoning Musk and other executives for questioning over alleged violations of French law.
What prosecutors are investigating
The probe, led by the Paris prosecutor’s cybercrime unit with assistance from French police and Europol, has expanded beyond its original focus on algorithm concerns. Authorities are now examining potential involvement in:
- The possession and spread of child sexual abuse imagery, including alleged deepfake content involving minors
- Sexualized AI-generated “deepfakes” and defamation involving personal image rights
- Holocaust denial and other hate content, which is criminal under French law
- Data-processing manipulation or algorithm abuse as part of organized offenses
Summonses and upcoming questioning
Prosecutors have asked Elon Musk, his AI firm xAI, and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino to appear for “voluntary” interviews in Paris on April 20, 2026. Other current and former employees have also been summoned as witnesses during the same week.
Why this matters internationally
France’s actions reflect broader European scrutiny of major tech platforms and AI tools. Regulators in the U.K. and EU are also examining X and its AI chatbot, Grok, for harmful or illegal content, data privacy concerns, and compliance with the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), including a reported €120 million fine tied to past violations.
X’s response so far
X and its legal team have not publicly commented on the raid. In earlier filings, the company dismissed parts of the investigation as politically motivated and argued it threatens free speech. French officials maintain the effort is aimed at ensuring compliance with national law.
Background
The investigation into X began with accusations that the site’s algorithms were politically biased and may have distorted automated data processing, Fox News reported.
But authorities soon widened the case after Musk’s AI chatbot, Grok, generated posts accused of denying the Holocaust and spreading sexually explicit deepfake content. Holocaust denial is a criminal offense under French law.
Now, the probe has ballooned into a much broader crackdown, targeting X’s content moderation policies, child safety safeguards, and enforcement of hate speech regulations — putting Musk’s platform under intensifying scrutiny across Europe.
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