On July 4, eccentric billionaire and owner of X Elon Musk went to his social media platform to make an announcement about his artificial intelligence bot called Grok.
“We have improved grock considerably,” Musk said the world. “You must notice a difference if you ask grok questions.”
Talk about the understatement of the century. Only a few days later, grok had to have eliminated functions after it started answering questions by Go full-nazi And embracing anti -Semitic conspiracy theories. The only thing that was missing was digital goosestepping and bracelets.
Fox News AI -Newsletter: Chatgpt that re -wires your brain
Responding to a user who asked Jews, Grok said that Adolf Hitler would “spot the pattern” and “the decisive, every damn time would treat.” For a good measure, it referred itself as Mechahitler.
If you are somewhat amazed by even reading those words, believe me, I am stunned to write them.
Xai has come up with a few weak apologies about how this was actually the fault of his users, who had recently asked Musk to teach grug politically incorrect truths. The company claims to have “patched” the problem, whatever that means.
But come on, let’s be honest, this is the Big-Tech equivalent of George Constanza who lies on the floor with his pants down while Jerry Seinfeld says: “And you want to be my latex seller?”
Big Tech Bro Shaun Maguire, a partner at Sequoia, went to X to support and write Musk Up: “It is embarrassing when the spaceship blows up, but it is better than designing in Cad Forever”, a kind of Pobody’s Nerfect defense.
Maguire unconsciously hit the big problem here. While the bloated spaceships are unmanned, X and Grock are manned by millions of users who are damaged when what claims to be the greatest intelligence on earth, to spit the ranking while the nods are worked out.
Presumably Musk and the team of Xai want to be the industrial stand in the near future to play an important role that our government, law enforcement, hospitals and even the Ministry of Defense manage. How can we even consider that?

If two or three lines of code immediately grock, one of the world’s leading AI engines, in Colonel Klink of “Hogan’s Heroes”, then it can be permitted nowhere near our essential industries or services.
The only thing we hear day and night is that AI is inevitable and that you cannot stop the future. But if you look closely, the people who say that they are usually the same people who encourage billions to make our mental power to machines.
And although Xai rivals such as Chatgpt have not yet become in literal fascists, they consistently need tweaks to eliminate bias or false information, a process that is ever underway.
On Wednesday evening, Xai Grok 4, the last and so -called biggest iteration so far. During the launch, Musk admitted that the impact of AI in the world might be good, or that it might be bad. Then he said something really surprising: “I reconciled myself somewhat with the fact that even if it were not good, I would at least want to be to see it happening.”
Click here for more the opinion of Fox News
It is difficult to explain how deeply irresponsible this sentiment is, especially when it is held by the man who has a leading AI. He is willing to go with the ship, but are the rest of us?
Technology feels overwhelming and gives us the same powerless feeling that we pick up when children have unobstructed access to hardcore porno online. But I assure you, we are not powerless.
The schizophrenic turn of grock as Nazi is a wake-up call. AI does not store or destroy, regardless of the technical brittle. Artificial intelligence is a power to resist everyone who sticks to their humanity. What better proof of this could we have than AI’s degenerate embrace of the pure inhumanity of Nazism?
Click here to get the Fox News app
You and I could never say the terrible things that so easily rolled off the virtual tongue of Grok. That is because we know the wrong way, what grok can never know. The only thing it can know is what Musk and his engineers say it should know.
Let Nazi Grok be a lesson in front of us that as people we always have to keep machines in place, be controlled by us, do not check us, and always ready to be disconnected.
Click here to Van David Marcus


