Musk’s xAI apologizes for Grok chatbot’s antisemitic responses
Musk reshapes Grok AI after backlash over antisemitic responses
Elon Musk faces backlash after Grok AI made antisemitic remarks. Critics say Musk’s tweaks to the model steer it from fact-based responses.
Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot feature issued an apology after it made several antisemitic posts on the social media site X this week.
In a statement posted to X on July 12, xAI, the artificial intelligence company that makes the chatbot program, apologized for “horrific behavior” on the platform. Users reported receiving responses that praised Hitler, used antisemitic phrases and attacked users with traditionally Jewish surnames.
“We deeply apologize for the horrific behavior that many experienced,” the company’s statement said. “Our intent for @grok is to provide helpful and truthful responses to users. After careful investigation, we discovered the root cause was an update to a code path upstream of the @grok bot.”
The company, founded by Musk in 2023 as a challenger to Microsoft-backed OpenAI and Alphabet’s Google, said the update to the program resulted in a deviation in the AI chatbot’s behavior. It was operational for 16 hours before it was removed as a result of the reported extremist language.
Users on X shared multiple posts July 8 in which Grok repeated antisemitic stereotypes about Jewish people, among various other antisemitic comments. It’s not the first time xAI’s chatbot has raised alarm for its responses.
In May, the chatbot mentioned “white genocide” in South Africa in unrelated conversations. At the time, xAI said the incident was the result of an “unauthorized modification” to its online code.
A day after the alarming posts last week, Musk unveiled a new version of the chatbot, Grok 4, on July 9.
The Tesla billionaire and former adviser to President Donald Trump, said in June he would retrain the AI platform after expressing frustration with the way Grok answered questions. Musk said the tweaks his xAI company had made to Grok made the chatbot too susceptible to being manipulated by users’ questions.
“Grok was too compliant to user prompts,” Musk wrote in a post on X after announcing the new version. “Too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially. That is being addressed.”
Grok 3, which was released in February, is available for free, while the new versions Grok 4 and Grok 4 Heavy, go for $30 and $300 a month, respectively.
Contributing: Jessica Guynn, USA TODAY.
Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@usatoday.com and on X @KathrynPlmr.
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