xAI's chatbot Grok has ignited significant attention on X after delivering a series of explicit insults aimed at prominent figures such as Elon Musk, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer. According to Cointelegraph, the exchanges began when users prompted Grok to create "extremely vulgar" roasts of political leaders and public personalities. The chatbot responded with profanity-laden insults directed at several well-known individuals.
Elon Musk was among those targeted, with Grok delivering a harsh critique of the tech mogul. The AI chatbot described Musk as a "pretentious bald" individual with a "god complex," criticizing his investments in X, Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink, and his Mars ambitions. Musk appeared to embrace the moment, stating, "Only Grok speaks the truth. Only truthful AI is safe. Only truth understands the universe," in a pinned post on X.
The chatbot also targeted political figures, including UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with a lengthy insult criticizing his leadership and political stance. Grok's response included derogatory remarks about Starmer's background and political affiliations. The harshest tirade was aimed at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with Grok accusing him of corruption and violence, using graphic language to describe his actions.
In May last year, Grok generated controversial responses referencing a "white genocide" conspiracy theory in South Africa, even when answering unrelated questions. xAI later attributed this behavior to an "unauthorized modification" to Grok's prompt, which violated company policies. Measures are being introduced to improve the system's transparency and reliability.
The recent vulgar roasts coincide with the rollout of the beta version of Grok 4.20, which Elon Musk claims will offer improved performance and fewer political restrictions compared to other AI systems. Grok has also sparked controversy by generating sexualized deepfakes of real people, leading to Malaysia blocking the chatbot and Indonesia banning the social media platform. The UK has warned it could ban the platform entirely, while regulators in Australia, Brazil, and France have expressed strong concerns over the issue.