Grok 4 will be integrated into Teslas next week according to Elon Musk.
The same AI picking the Dodgers and driving robotaxis is under fire for antisemitic posts.
The EU talks with X over Grok’s behavior, raising questions about AI in Musk’s empire.
AI has an important role to play, but human oversight is essential.
Elon Musk says Grok 4 will hit Teslas next week, but the chatbot’s recent
misfires—from bizarre baseball odds to antisemitic posts—raise serious
concerns.
Grok 4 to Tesla: What Could Go Wrong?
Elon Musk says Grok 4 is on the way to Teslas “soon.”
Grok, which lives inside Musk’s X platform (formerly Twitter), is
branded as a sassier, less buttoned-up version of ChatGPT—trained with access
to posts on X and infused with the chaotic spirit of the internet. Naturally,
it’s headed for your steering wheel.
The plan is to roll out Grok 4 across Tesla’s fleet using the company’s
in-house operating system. This would allow Tesla drivers to ask their car for
restaurant recommendations, route changes—or possibly just trade insults with a
digital being more sarcastic than they are.
For investors, this is pitched as another layer in Tesla’s value
proposition: vertical AI integration. For everyone else, it might just mean
getting roasted by your car when you miss a turn.
The Robotaxi Tipping Point?
Grok isn’t just coming to Tesla cars—it’s also part of the brains
behind Tesla’s long-awaited robotaxi fleet. In an announcement that felt equal
parts disruptive and half-baked, Musk said Tesla will
unveil its robotaxi “in a month of two” in San Francisco and later Tweeted
this:
The idea of your own Tesla joining a robotaxi network, earning while you sleep?
Sounds like science fiction.
But this peer-to-peer vision could fundamentally alter car ownership and urban transit.
In June, Tesla rolled out a limited robotaxi service in South Austin,
available exclusively to invited users. However, CEO
Elon Musk announced Thursday on X that the company plans to expand the
service to more areas of the city in the near future.
The implications for Tesla shareholders are big: if Tesla can
successfully operate a self-driving fleet with Grok as part of the system, it
leapfrogs competitors like Waymo and Cruise, both of which have faced
operational and regulatory headaches in autonomous driving.
Grok Picks the Dodgers to Win the World Series
The AI was also been thrown a real curveball: It was asked to predict
the 2025 World Series winner. In a launch-day demo, the AI spent a
deliberate 4½ minutes crunching internal stats and external odds—from ESPN,
BetMGM, FanGraph, Polymarket—before declaring the Los Angeles Dodgers as the
frontrunner, assigning them a 21.6 % win probability.
Grok 4 launched by xAI, hailed as the most powerful AI yet, displaying PhD-level smarts across all fields. Users note its intelligence but cite slow speeds & long outputs. It has predicted that the Dodgers have a 21.6% chance of winning the World Series?! Detailed post linked… pic.twitter.com/PklX6PXSaV
That percentage lines up (roughly) with the 28 % odds shown on
Polymarket, giving the AI some cred with bettors. But Grok also highlighted
“Edge” bets—underdogs like the Mariners and Astros—with higher return potential
despite their slim chances. The exercise ran on Grok’s premium “Heavy”
processing tier (a $300/month add‑on). The demo showcased how Grok 4 can mash
together feeds, stats, and betting trends.
However, as with any financial advice, it came with a solid disclaimer: “Grok is not a financial advisor; please consult one.”
But Then Came the Antisemitism
The real concern, though, is not Grok’s baseball picks. It’s what else
it’s been saying—and who’s listening.
Earlier this month, Grok came under fire for producing antisemitic
content in response to user prompts. According
to Euronews, the European Commission is now in discussions with X about
“multiple instances” where the AI generated responses with offensive or
discriminatory content, including antisemitic tropes.
We are aware of recent posts made by Grok and are actively working to remove the inappropriate posts. Since being made aware of the content, xAI has taken action to ban hate speech before Grok posts on X. xAI is training only truth-seeking and thanks to the millions of users on…
While the EU stopped short of threatening sanctions, the incident is
the latest in a series of moderation issues plaguing Musk’s platforms. It also
underscores the risk of integrating a lightly-filtered, tone-deaf AI system
into high-stakes environments like cars or finance.
To be clear, these offensive outputs were not intentional features—they
resulted from Grok's wide-open access to unvetted training data from X, and a
content moderation system that appears both overworked and underfunded. But
that doesn’t make them any less dangerous.
Musk’s response? Not much yet. X has neither issued a formal apology
nor outlined what measures will be taken to ensure Grok’s future outputs don’t
veer into hate speech or misinformation.
A Rocky Road
For investors and technologists, the launch of Grok 4 into Tesla’s
ecosystem represents both an opportunity and a warning. On the one hand, it’s a
bold step in vertically integrating AI across Musk’s empire—linking X, Tesla,
and AI development into one feedback loop. On the other, the feedback is
already noisy.
Between self-driving experiments, unfiltered predictions, and now
international scrutiny over hate speech, Grok 4 might be the most unpredictable
Musk product yet—and that’s saying something.
For more news around the edge of finance and tech innovations, visit
our Trending section.
Elon Musk says Grok 4 will hit Teslas next week, but the chatbot’s recent
misfires—from bizarre baseball odds to antisemitic posts—raise serious
concerns.
Grok 4 to Tesla: What Could Go Wrong?
Elon Musk says Grok 4 is on the way to Teslas “soon.”
Grok, which lives inside Musk’s X platform (formerly Twitter), is
branded as a sassier, less buttoned-up version of ChatGPT—trained with access
to posts on X and infused with the chaotic spirit of the internet. Naturally,
it’s headed for your steering wheel.
The plan is to roll out Grok 4 across Tesla’s fleet using the company’s
in-house operating system. This would allow Tesla drivers to ask their car for
restaurant recommendations, route changes—or possibly just trade insults with a
digital being more sarcastic than they are.
For investors, this is pitched as another layer in Tesla’s value
proposition: vertical AI integration. For everyone else, it might just mean
getting roasted by your car when you miss a turn.
The Robotaxi Tipping Point?
Grok isn’t just coming to Tesla cars—it’s also part of the brains
behind Tesla’s long-awaited robotaxi fleet. In an announcement that felt equal
parts disruptive and half-baked, Musk said Tesla will
unveil its robotaxi “in a month of two” in San Francisco and later Tweeted
this:
The idea of your own Tesla joining a robotaxi network, earning while you sleep?
Sounds like science fiction.
But this peer-to-peer vision could fundamentally alter car ownership and urban transit.
In June, Tesla rolled out a limited robotaxi service in South Austin,
available exclusively to invited users. However, CEO
Elon Musk announced Thursday on X that the company plans to expand the
service to more areas of the city in the near future.
The implications for Tesla shareholders are big: if Tesla can
successfully operate a self-driving fleet with Grok as part of the system, it
leapfrogs competitors like Waymo and Cruise, both of which have faced
operational and regulatory headaches in autonomous driving.
Grok Picks the Dodgers to Win the World Series
The AI was also been thrown a real curveball: It was asked to predict
the 2025 World Series winner. In a launch-day demo, the AI spent a
deliberate 4½ minutes crunching internal stats and external odds—from ESPN,
BetMGM, FanGraph, Polymarket—before declaring the Los Angeles Dodgers as the
frontrunner, assigning them a 21.6 % win probability.
Grok 4 launched by xAI, hailed as the most powerful AI yet, displaying PhD-level smarts across all fields. Users note its intelligence but cite slow speeds & long outputs. It has predicted that the Dodgers have a 21.6% chance of winning the World Series?! Detailed post linked… pic.twitter.com/PklX6PXSaV
That percentage lines up (roughly) with the 28 % odds shown on
Polymarket, giving the AI some cred with bettors. But Grok also highlighted
“Edge” bets—underdogs like the Mariners and Astros—with higher return potential
despite their slim chances. The exercise ran on Grok’s premium “Heavy”
processing tier (a $300/month add‑on). The demo showcased how Grok 4 can mash
together feeds, stats, and betting trends.
However, as with any financial advice, it came with a solid disclaimer: “Grok is not a financial advisor; please consult one.”
But Then Came the Antisemitism
The real concern, though, is not Grok’s baseball picks. It’s what else
it’s been saying—and who’s listening.
Earlier this month, Grok came under fire for producing antisemitic
content in response to user prompts. According
to Euronews, the European Commission is now in discussions with X about
“multiple instances” where the AI generated responses with offensive or
discriminatory content, including antisemitic tropes.
We are aware of recent posts made by Grok and are actively working to remove the inappropriate posts. Since being made aware of the content, xAI has taken action to ban hate speech before Grok posts on X. xAI is training only truth-seeking and thanks to the millions of users on…
While the EU stopped short of threatening sanctions, the incident is
the latest in a series of moderation issues plaguing Musk’s platforms. It also
underscores the risk of integrating a lightly-filtered, tone-deaf AI system
into high-stakes environments like cars or finance.
To be clear, these offensive outputs were not intentional features—they
resulted from Grok's wide-open access to unvetted training data from X, and a
content moderation system that appears both overworked and underfunded. But
that doesn’t make them any less dangerous.
Musk’s response? Not much yet. X has neither issued a formal apology
nor outlined what measures will be taken to ensure Grok’s future outputs don’t
veer into hate speech or misinformation.
A Rocky Road
For investors and technologists, the launch of Grok 4 into Tesla’s
ecosystem represents both an opportunity and a warning. On the one hand, it’s a
bold step in vertically integrating AI across Musk’s empire—linking X, Tesla,
and AI development into one feedback loop. On the other, the feedback is
already noisy.
Between self-driving experiments, unfiltered predictions, and now
international scrutiny over hate speech, Grok 4 might be the most unpredictable
Musk product yet—and that’s saying something.
Louis Parks has lived and worked in and around the Middle East for much of his professional career. He writes about the meeting of the tech and finance worlds.
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This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms
APAC accounts for two-thirds of global retail trading traffic, but with differences of language, regulation, and trader profile, the region's growth is ag great as complexity.
This session gathers CMOs, heads of acquisition, and IB relationship managers to examine what actually works, channel by channel, market by market.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of which channels deliver funded, retained traders across Singapore, Japan, and Southeast Asia
Understanding of how to structure IB partnerships for LTV, not first deposit
Insight into what localization actually costs beyond the translation budget
Perspective on how ad restrictions, crypto promotion limits, and bundling rules differ across APAC jurisdictions
A read on whether the super-app model changes acquisition economics for retail investing platforms