Elon Musk’s New Software Company Is Opposite of Microsoft
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Grok, the AI chatbot by Elon Musk’s company xAI, rolled out in Tesla vehicles earlier this month alongside a recent software update.
Elon Musk’s xAI announced a new feature for its AI chatbot Grok that will allow users to create 6-second video clips.
Elon Musk on Wednesday teased a forthcoming male Grok companion from xAI, which already offers an anime waifu named Ani and a red panda named Rudi.
The account was quickly taken down with a vague notice about rule violations, but no official reason was given. When Grok reappeared, it offered mixed explanations for the suspension, sparking widespread confusion.
Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup xAI has open-sourced its Grok 2.5 model and plans to do the same for its Grok 3 model in roughly six months, the billionaire said in a post on his social media platform X on Saturday.
Elon Musk posted on X that Grok Imagine, his AI-powered video-to-text generator, "is AI Vine," adding that he was working to restore the defunct app.
Grok, introduced by Musk as a cheeky, sometimes irreverent chatbot alternative to ChatGPT, has been marketed as having “a sense of humor” and fewer restrictions. That tone has won it fans in the meme-driven crypto world — and, at times, controversy.
During a recent online clash with Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, Elon Musk experienced an unexpected twist when his own AI chatbot, Grok, publicly sided with Altman. The confrontation began after Musk accused Apple of unfairly promoting OpenAI’s ChatGPT in the App Store.
More than 370,000 Grok chats have been indexed by search engines, exposing sensitive queries that include intimate medical and psychological questions, business details, and at least one password.
Elon Musk's xAI has open-sourced its Grok 2.5 model and plans to do the same for Grok 3 in the next 6 months. Musk had previously shared that Grok 5 model will be launched by the end of this year.
“It appears Elon has shifted focus from Mars to Uranus,” one Musk fan tweeted Thursday, ribbing him for his torrent of cartoon girls. “Please tell me that he got hacked,” another person tweeted, seemingly in disbelief at the rate of posting, with someone else insisting, “I think from all these posts you’re really into Hentai.”