In brief
- Elon Musk’s AI company filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block Colorado’s AI law before it takes effect on June 30.
- The case reflects a broader conflict over whether states or the federal government should regulate artificial intelligence.
- The company faces separate lawsuits and investigations tied to Grok’s image-generation tools.
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block Colorado from enforcing a new law regulating high-risk AI systems.
In court documents filed on Thursday, Musk’s lawsuit targets Colorado Senate Bill 24-205, scheduled to take effect on June 30, which requires developers of AI systems to disclose risks and take steps to prevent algorithmic discrimination in areas such as employment, housing, healthcare, education, and financial services.
According to the complaint, the company argues the measure would force developers to modify how AI systems operate and could restrict how models generate responses.
“SB24-205 is decidedly not an anti-discrimination law. It is instead an effort to embed the State’s preferred views into the very fabric of AI systems,” attorneys for xAI wrote. “Its provisions prohibit developers of AI systems from producing speech that the State of Colorado dislikes, while compelling them to conform their speech to a State-enforced orthodoxy on controversial topics of great public concern.”
The lawsuit asks a federal court to declare the law unconstitutional and block its enforcement, which xAI says violates the First Amendment by forcing changes to Grok’s outputs to align with the state’s views on diversity and equity. The lawsuit also argues that SB24-205 improperly regulates activity beyond Colorado, and is too vague to enforce fairly, and favors AI systems that promote “diversity” while penalizing those that do not.
"By requiring “developers” and “deployers” to differentiate between discrimination that Colorado disfavors and discrimination that Colorado favors, SB24-205 compels Plaintiff xAI—a “developer” under the law—to alter Grok, forcing Grok’s output on certain State-selected subjects to conform to a controversial, highly politicized viewpoint,” the lawsuit said. “But the State “may not compel [xAI] to speak its own preferred messages.”
The legal challenge comes amid a growing conflict between technology companies and government officials over how artificial intelligence should be regulated. Several states, including Colorado, New York, and California, have introduced rules addressing risks posed by generative AI tools. At the same time, the Donald Trump administration has moved to establish a national AI regulatory framework.
The lawsuit also arrives as scrutiny of xAI’s chatbot Grok continues to increase.
Several lawsuits filed in 2026 accuse the company of allowing Grok to generate non-consensual deepfake images. In March, a class-action complaint filed by three Tennessee minors alleged that Grok produced explicit images depicting them without consent. The city of Baltimore also sued, claiming Grok generated up to 3 million sexualized images in a matter of days, including thousands depicting minors.
xAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Decrypt.
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