Article 6H2GS Elon Musk’s new AI bot, Grok, causes stir by citing OpenAI usage policy

Elon Musk’s new AI bot, Grok, causes stir by citing OpenAI usage policy

by
Benj Edwards
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6H2GS)
broken_robot_gears-800x450.jpg

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Grok, the AI language model created by Elon Musk's xAI, went into wide release last week, and people have begun spotting glitches. On Friday, security tester Jax Winterbourne tweeted a screenshot of Grok denying a query with the statement, "I'm afraid I cannot fulfill that request, as it goes against OpenAI's use case policy." That made ears perk up online since Grok isn't made by OpenAI-the company responsible for ChatGPT, which Grok is positioned to compete with.

Interestingly, xAI representatives did not deny that this behavior occurs with its AI model. In reply, xAI employee Igor Babuschkin wrote, "The issue here is that the web is full of ChatGPT outputs, so we accidentally picked up some of them when we trained Grok on a large amount of web data. This was a huge surprise to us when we first noticed it. For what it's worth, the issue is very rare and now that we're aware of it we'll make sure that future versions of Grok don't have this problem. Don't worry, no OpenAI code was used to make Grok."

In reply to Babuschkin, Winterbourne wrote, "Thanks for the response. I will say it's not very rare, and occurs quite frequently when involving code creation. Nonetheless, I'll let people who specialize in LLM and AI weigh in on this further. I'm merely an observer."

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index
Feed Title Ars Technica - All content
Feed Link https://arstechnica.com/
Reply 0 comments