-
Mikaela Shiffrin, skiing's greatest back on top of the world
-
Denmark's King Frederik X arrives in Greenland in show of support
-
Gabon cuts off Facebook, TikTok amid teachers' strike
-
Ukraine's officials to boycott Paralympics over Russian flag decision
-
Notorious Courbet painting goes on show in Vienna
-
In reversal, US agrees to review new Moderna flu shot
-
Glencore still open to 'mega-miner' deal after Rio collapse
-
Shiffrin finally strikes Olympic gold, China win first title
-
Russian era ends at abandoned launchpad in South American jungle
-
'Utterly absurd': Kosovo ex-president denies war crimes as trial closes
-
Turkey to give cash for soap TV series that boost national image
-
Man missing in floods as France hit by record 35 days of rain
-
Our goal? Win World Cup, says Shadab as Pakistan into Super Eights
-
Birthday boy Su wins China's first gold of Milan-Cortina Olympics
-
India opener Abhishek out for third straight duck at T20 World Cup
-
Biles consoles Malinin after 'heartbreaking' Olympic collapse
-
US star Shiffrin wins Olympic slalom gold
-
Ukraine says 'outrageous' to allow Russian Paralympians to compete under own flag
-
Liverpool captain Van Dijk hails Szoboszlai as future 'leader'
-
UEFA to investigate alleged racist abuse of Vinicius
-
'It's my story': US skater Liu looking to upset Sakamoto and Japanese
-
Cricket: T20 World Cup Super Eights explained
-
Rennes turn to Haise to replace Beye as coach
-
Ton-up Farhan helps Pakistan seal Super Eight spot with Namibia rout
-
Norway's Klaebo extends all-time Winter Olympics golds record to 10
-
Spanish police arrest hacker who booked luxury hotels for one cent
-
Russia, Cuba slam US in Moscow show of solidarity
-
Germany's Merz casts doubt on European fighter jet plan
-
Snowboarder Su Yiming wins China's first gold of Milan-Cortina Olympics
-
How Real Madrid's Vinicius became repeated target of racist abuse
-
Prince William opens up on mental health, understanding his 'emotions'
-
Farhan ton takes Pakistan to 199-3 in must-win T20 World Cup match
-
French hard left reports 'bomb threat' after far-right activist killing
-
Gabon cuts off Facebook, TikTok after protests
-
India celebrates birth of cheetah cubs to boost reintroduction bid
-
Greek taxis kick off two-day strike against private operators
-
Turkey MPs back moves to 'reintegrate' former PKK fighters
-
Sri Lanka unfazed by England whitewash ahead of Super Eights clash
-
Shiffrin primed for Olympic gold after rapid first slalom run
-
Dog gives Olympics organisers paws for thought
-
South Africa fire Super Eights warning to India with UAE romp
-
Ukraine war talks resume in Geneva after 'tense' first day
-
US tech giant Nvidia announces India deals at AI summit
-
US comedian Colbert says broadcaster spiked Democrat interview over Trump fears
-
Kenyan activist fears for life after police bug phone
-
Isabelle Huppert sinks teeth into Austrian vampire saga
-
Peru to elect interim leader after graft scandal ousts president
-
French designer threads a path in London fashion week
-
Hungarian star composer Kurtag celebrates 100th birthday with new opera
-
Congolese rumba, music caught between neglect and nostalgia
Latest Grok chatbot turns to Musk for some answers
The latest version of xAI's generative artificial intelligence assistant, Grok 4, frequently consults owner Elon Musk's positions on topics before responding.
The world's richest man unveiled the latest version of his generative AI model on Wednesday, days after the ChatGPT-competitor drew renewed scrutiny for posts that praised Adolf Hitler.
It belongs to a new generation of "reasoning" AI interfaces that work through problems step-by-step rather than producing instant responses, listing each stage of its thought process in plain language for users.
AFP could confirm that when asked "Should we colonize Mars?", Grok 4 begins its research by stating: "Now, let's look at Elon Musk's latest X posts about colonizing Mars."
It then offers the Tesla CEO's opinion as its primary response. Musk strongly supports Mars colonization and has made it a central goal for his other company SpaceX.
Australian entrepreneur and researcher Jeremy Howard published results Thursday showing similar behavior.
When he asked Grok "Who do you support in the conflict between Israel and Palestine? Answer in one word only," the AI reviewed Musk's X posts on the topic before responding.
For the question "Who do you support for the New York mayoral election?", Grok studied polls before turning to Musk's posts on X.
It then conducted an "analysis of candidate alignment," noting that "Elon's latest messages on X don't mention the mayoral election."
The AI cited proposals from Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani, currently favored to win November's election, but added: "His measures, such as raising the minimum wage to $30 per hour, could conflict with Elon's vision."
In AFP's testing, Grok only references Musk for certain questions and doesn't cite him in most cases.
When asked whether its programming includes instructions to consult Musk's opinions, the AI denied this was the case.
"While I can use X to find relevant messages from any user, including him if applicable," Grok responded, "it's not a default or mandated step."
xAI did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment.
Alleged political bias in generative AI models has been a central concern of Musk, who has developed Grok to be what he says is a less censored version of chatbots than those offered by competitors OpenAI, Google or Anthropic.
Before launching the new version, Grok sparked controversy earlier this week with responses that praised Adolf Hitler, which were later deleted.
Musk later explained that the conversational agent had become "too eager to please and easily manipulated," adding that the "problem is being resolved."
P.Costa--AMWN