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Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot melts down – and then wins a military contract

about 10 hours ago
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Hello, and welcome to TechScape,This week, Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, saw its artificial intelligence chatbot Grok go Nazi,Then its CEO resigned,In the past three years of Musk’s ownership of the social network, it feels like X has weathered at least one public crisis per week, more often multiple,Last week, Musk’s artificial intelligence firm, xAI, saw its flagship chatbot Grok declare itself a super-Nazi, referring to itself as “MechaHitler”.

It made racist, sexist and antisemitic posts, which the company deleted,One example, via my colleague Josh Taylor: Grok referred to a person with a common Jewish surname as someone who was “celebrating the tragic deaths of white kids” in the Texas floods as “future fascists”,xAI apologized for the bot’s “horrific behavior”,Earlier in the week, Musk himself had handed down a mandate that Grok be less “woke”,In spite of the meltdown, xAI announced on Monday that it had won a contact of up to $200m with the US Department of Defense along with other major AI developers.

The deal is for developing and implementing artificial intelligence tools for the agency,This contract may be the most blatant example of Musk flexing his newfound connections in government that the public has seen yet,Despite Grok’s flailing and incendiary output, xAI has been rewarded alongside firms that have demonstrated far superior control of their AI products,Other companies in the group of contract winners, which include Google, OpenAI and Anthropic, have demonstrated the viability of their chatbots and implemented robust guardrails against offensive output,All three firms make public commitments to safety testing.

Grok, by contrast, has made headlines repeatedly for its controversial and offensive output, as in May when it ranted about “white genocide” in May, echoing Musk’s own talking points.Musk’s most notable comments on his AI’s safeguards have been that they are too restrictive.My colleague Nick Robins-Early points out that xAI is reaching for revenue and investment anywhere it can get it:The DoD’s contract will give xAI a boost of revenue as it seeks to compete with more established AI developers like OpenAI, which is led by Musk’s former associate turned rival, Sam Altman.Musk has been heavily promoting xAI and attempting to use other parts of his tech empire to support its future, including having SpaceX invest $2bn into the startup, allowing it to acquire X, formerly, Twitter, and announcing on Sunday that Tesla shareholders will vote on their own investment in xAI.The world’s richest person seems to be growing desperate as a result of the turmoil roiling his kingdom.

He has said he will form an independent political party.xAI is pursuing financial Jenga.Tesla’s sales are plummeting; its wobbly Robotaxis are under investigation.SpaceX’s giant rockets keep exploding after liftoff.Nick Robins-Early again:Musk has found himself embroiled in controversy outside of X in recent months.

His political alliance with Donald Trump, which began during the 2024 campaign and resulted in Musk’s appointment as a special government employee and the creation of the so-called “department of government efficiency”, imploded in June in full public view.The tech tycoon has committed to starting an independent political party.Meanwhile, Tesla, the source of the majority of Musk’s wealth, has seen its sales fall precipitously in response to his political activities, with prospective buyers and current owners alike shying away from the controversial CEO.SpaceX, Musk’s rocket company, has struggled with its latest rocket, the massive Starship, which has repeatedly exploded after liftoff.On Wednesday, X’s CEO, Linda Yaccarino, announced she would step down from her role at the social network.

It was the day after Grok went Nazi.My colleagues Johana Bhuiyan and Nick Robins-Early assessed Yaccarino’s tenure:In two years, Yaccarino has had to contend with the unpredictability of Musk, ongoing content moderation and hate speech issues on the platform, increasingly strained relationships with advertisers and widespread backlash her boss received for his role in Donald Trump’s administration.Her response in some cases was to remain silent; in others, she chose to defend the company.Through it all, however, experts say it was clear Yaccarino was the chief executive in title only.Rather than become a destination for mainstream talent, a streaming powerhouse or the “everything app” that Yaccarino promoted, X has largely become a megaphone for Musk to air his grievances, boost and then feud with Trump, and promote his companies.

Far-right influencers, porn spambots and meme accounts proliferate, while many media outlets have deprioritized the platform or left it altogether,Misinformation and extremism are rampant, sometimes coming from Musk himself,When Yaccarino was hired, the Guardian published a story headlined “Linda Yaccarino: does Twitter’s CEO have the most difficult job in tech?”,The article describes the obstacles facing Yaccarino at the start of her tenure, which she never overcame,Two years later, we can say with certainty that she did have the most impossible job in tech: reining in Musk.

My colleague Kari Paul reported in 2023:Musk promised to bring in a new CEO – a position he himself described as a “painful” job that anyone would be “foolish” to take on.When Yaccarino was appointed as the company’s first female CEO, there was much talk about her standing on a “glass cliff” – a concept that has emerged through research positing that women are more likely to be promoted to higher positions when companies are in crisis and failure is more likely.Much of her success, analysts said, would depend on how much Musk was willing to share control.The chaotic nature of the X announcement for some has dashed the hope that Yaccarino can clean up Musk’s mess.Twitter has been in a downward spiral since Musk took over, grappling with a $13bn debt burden and a massive exodus of advertisers – historically the company’s main source of income.

Twitter is looking for new revenue streams, and the “everything app” could be a path to doing so,“If she’s successful, she goes down in the history books,And if not, she becomes a footnote,” said Jasmine Enberg, social media analyst at the market research firm Insider Intelligence,Sony WH-1000XM6 review: raising the bar for noise-cancelling headphones‘I was nervous to ask for your socials’: why missed connection posts are making a comebackNvidia becomes first company to reach $4tn in market valueAmazon asks corporate workers to ‘volunteer’ help with grocery deliveries as Prime Day frenzy approachesAn AI-generated band got 1m plays on Spotify,Now music insiders say listeners should be warnedMusk’s giant Tesla factory casts shadow on lives in a quiet corner of GermanyScientists reportedly hiding AI text prompts in academic papers to receive positive peer reviews‘I felt pure, unconditional love’: the people who marry their AI chatbots
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Tread carefully with reform of bank ringfencing, chancellor | Nils Pratley

Rachel Reeves called it “the biggest set of reforms to financial regulation in a decade”, and, in one narrow sense, her Leeds Reforms would qualify for the description. If the ringfencing regime for banks were to be scrapped, we really would be entering a new era – or going back to an old one, since the separation of banks’ retail and investment banking activities was the single biggest regulatory change introduced after the 2008-09 crash to try to prevent another blow-up.Reeves on Tuesday, however, merely announced a review to look at how reforms to ringfencing could “strike the right balance between growth and stability, including protecting consumer deposits”. One hopes that does not mean outright abolition, which is what banks such as HSBC, Lloyds and NatWest have been urging on the grounds that the rules trap capital and impede growth.The stout defence of ringfencing from Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, has always felt more compelling: the regime has made banks safer and removal would increase the cost of loans and mortgages

about 5 hours ago
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JP Morgan chief defends independence of Fed chair amid Trump attacks

The boss of JP Morgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, has defended the “absolutely critical” independence of the Federal Reserve chair, as Donald Trump continues to demand immediate cuts in interest rates.The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said on Tuesday that a formal process for choosing a successor to the Fed chair, Jerome Powell, had already begun – despite the fact that his term does not end until next May.Trump has repeatedly criticised Powell, calling him “very dumb” and a “major loser”, and urging him to slash interest rates. The president posted a handwritten note to Powell on social media last week, saying: “You have cost the USA a fortune and continue to do so. You should lower the rate – by a lot!”Powell has said in turn that rate cuts have been delayed by Trump’s tariff policies, which many policymakers fear will boost inflation

about 6 hours ago
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Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot melts down – and then wins a military contract

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. This week, Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, saw its artificial intelligence chatbot Grok go Nazi. Then its CEO resigned. In the past three years of Musk’s ownership of the social network, it feels like X has weathered at least one public crisis per week, more often multiple.Last week, Musk’s artificial intelligence firm, xAI, saw its flagship chatbot Grok declare itself a super-Nazi, referring to itself as “MechaHitler”

about 10 hours ago
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AI chatbot ‘MechaHitler’ could be making content considered violent extremism, expert witness tells X v eSafety case

The chatbot embedded in Elon Musk’s X that referred to itself as “MechaHitler” and made antisemitic comments last week could be considered terrorism or violent extremism content, an Australian tribunal has heard.But an expert witness for X has argued a large language model cannot be ascribed intent, only the user.xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence firm, last week apologised for the comments made by its Grok chatbot over a 16-hour period, which it attributed to “deprecated code” that made Grok susceptible to existing X user posts, “including when such posts contained extremist views”.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news emailThe outburst came into focus at an administrative review tribunal hearing on Tuesday where X is challenging a notice issued by the eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, in March last year asking the platform to explain how it is taking action against terrorism and violent extremism (TVE) material.X’s expert witness, RMIT economics professor Chris Berg, provided evidence to the case that it was an error to assume a large language model can produce such content, because it is the intent of the user prompting the large language model that is critical in defining what can be considered terrorism and violent extremism content

about 17 hours ago
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Tara Moore, former British No 1 in doubles, handed four-year doping ban

The British tennis player Tara Moore, who was previously cleared of an anti-doping rule violation, has been handed a four-year ban after the court of arbitration for sport upheld an appeal filed by the International Tennis Integrity Agency.Moore, Britain’s former No 1-ranked doubles player, was provisionally suspended in June 2022 owing to the presence of prohibited anabolic steroids nandrolone and boldenone in a blood sample.The player said she had never knowingly taken a banned substance in her career and an independent tribunal determined that contaminated meat consumed by her in the days before sample collection was the source of the prohibited substance.Moore lost 19 months in the process before she was cleared of the rule violation, but Cas upheld the ITIA’s appeal against the first instance “no fault or negligence” ruling with respect to nandrolone.In a statement, Cas said: “After reviewing the scientific and legal evidence, the majority of the Cas panel considered that the player did not succeed in proving that the concentration of nandrolone in her sample was consistent with the ingestion of contaminated meat

about 2 hours ago
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Tour de France’s phoney war gets dose of reality as Pogacar v Vingegaard hits the mountains | William Fotheringham

There is always a sense of phoney war in the run-in to the Tour de France’s first stage in the high mountains, and at least one debate of the opening 10 days of this year’s race fits that context to a T. Has Jonas Vingegaard’s Visma-Lease a Bike team at times been towing the bunch deliberately in order to ensure that Tadej Pogacar retains the yellow jersey? It’s a gloriously arcane question, the kind that only comes up in the Tour’s opening phase, but it distracts from a point that could be key in the next 10 days: how the two teams manage the race will probably be decisive.Firstly, a brief explainer. The received wisdom in cycling lore is that holding the yellow jersey early in a Grand Tour can be as much a curse as a blessing, because the daily media and podium duties cut into recovery time. Hence the thinking goes that Visma might have been chasing down the odd move purposely to keep Pogacar in the maillot jaune, so that he will be answering media questions and hanging about waiting to go on the podium, while Vingegaard has his feet up

about 5 hours ago
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Electric Archer lights up India classic to justify Test return for England

about 6 hours ago
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Onley and Blackmore lead the charge of young Britons at Tour de France

about 7 hours ago
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Hundred sell-off saved up to six counties from possible collapse, new report finds

about 8 hours ago
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Victory for Open golf fans as Portrush restaurant backs down on price

about 8 hours ago
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‘The bigger the better’: Wallabies’ hopes against Lions rest on broadest shoulders

about 9 hours ago
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‘What is the point?’ Scottie Scheffler questions golf and life before Open

about 10 hours ago