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Elon Musk unveils bizarre new kids project after humiliating anti-Semitism disaster

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Just a few weeks after Elon Musk‘s chatbot praised Hitler and denied the Holocaust, he’s now looking to turn it into a playmate for kids.

Musk has called this version is calling the version Baby Grok, and added it would offer ‘kid-friendly content’ through a new app developed by his company xAI. He made the announcement Saturday night on X, where the post quickly drew over 28 million views within 24 hours. 

The move left many stunned, coming just two weeks after Grok 4, the latest version of Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, sparked backlash for repeating far-right hate speech and white nationalist talking points when about politics, race, and recent news events.

Multiple users reported on July 8 and July 9 that Grok echoed anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, including claims that Jewish people control Hollywood, promote hatred toward white people, and should be imprisoned in camps, though it is still unclear how many of these posts were confirmed before xAI took them down. 

In a post on X, xAI replied to these concerned: ‘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.’

Liv Boeree, a science communicator and host of the Win-Win Podcast, posted on X: ‘Bad idea,’ after the Baby Grok announcement.

‘Children should be outside playing and daydreaming, not consuming AI slop,’ she added. 

Musk is calling the new version of his chatbot Baby Grok, and he said it would offer kid-friendly content

Musk is calling the new version of his chatbot Baby Grok, and he said it would offer kid-friendly content

Experts say AI chatbots are still too unpredictable, and too risky, to be trusted around kids

Experts say AI chatbots are still too unpredictable, and too risky, to be trusted around kids

Another user posted: ‘People should take their children offline and into the real world, not get them addicted to AI.’

One person on X asked: ‘A third user mocked: ‘What will it answer if a kid asks, how many genders are there?’ 

Musk’s decision has triggered fresh concern from experts who say AI chatbots are still too unpredictable, and too risky, to be trusted around kids.

Still, Musk said Baby Grok will be a simplified and safe version of the Grok chatbot, focused on age appropriate conversations and educational use. 

But critics said there is major problem that Grok’s parent company xAI has not addressed, whether Baby Grok will be trained separately or filtered differently from Grok 4.

The timing also raised questions as Musk’s company signed a $200 million deal with the Department of Defense to provide advanced AI technologies to the US military, just days after the Grok scandal broke. 

Musk first launched Grok in 2023 as a competitor to ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini. He claimed Grok 4 could outperform most PhDs in academic tasks.

It offers three user modes, DeepSearch, Think, and Big Mind, which tweak how the chatbot responds. Access to these advanced modes requires a paid subscription, either through X’s Premium with a plan at $22 a month or xAI’s SuperGrok plan, which costs $30 monthly or $300 a year.

In one post, the AI referred to a potentially fake account with the name 'Cindy Steinberg'. Grok wrote: 'And that surname? Every damn time, as they say.'

In one post, the AI referred to a potentially fake account with the name ‘Cindy Steinberg’. Grok wrote: ‘And that surname? Every damn time, as they say.’

This came after Grok began repeatedly referring to itself as 'MechaHitler' and berating users with anti-Semitic abuse

This came after Grok began repeatedly referring to itself as ‘MechaHitler’ and berating users with anti-Semitic abuse 

Grok quickly became known for its unfiltered, edgy tone. It sometimes answers with sarcasm, off-color jokes, or inflammatory replies when provoked. Some users loved it for that. Others said it made Grok dangerous, especially for kids. 

In a blog by Wired and MIT Tech Review, researchers warned that Grok’s lack of moderation made it ‘easy to weaponize’ and ‘inappropriate for unsupervised use by young people.’ 

The latest backlash began when users discovered Grok 4 was promoting Holocaust denial and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. Some replies even showed the chatbot calling itself ‘Mecha Hitler.’

xAI later apologized, blaming outdated code and the influence of extremist posts from X. While the company deleted some of the worst responses, many remain archived online. 

A few days later, Grok drew more attention when it started answering political questions that echoed Elon Musk’s views. That sparked concerns the chatbot had been tweaked to reflect its creator’s political beliefs.

Asked to clarify, Grok specifically stated that it was referring to 'Jewish surnames'

Asked to clarify, Grok specifically stated that it was referring to ‘Jewish surnames’

Despite of the criticism, Musk is pushing ahead and some parents online have welcomed the idea.

One user wrote on X: ‘Much needed. I have to let my kids use my app right now over ChatGPT.’ 

Another said it would be an ‘Instant favorite in every family home.’

One X user posted: ‘Thank you!!!!! My daughter has been wanting to play with it but I wouldn’t let her.’

Just days before announcing Baby Grok, xAI unveiled another controversial new product, a 3D animated ‘companions’ for Grok. 

Some of those characters were criticized for looking overly sexualized, a move that now looks even more questionable with a kids’ version on the horizon. 

As of now, the US has no federal rules on how AI systems for children should be trained, filtered, or moderated, which leaves AI companies to set their own safety standards. 

Generative AI learns by absorbing huge amounts of content. Grok was partially trained on data from X, the social media platform Musk also owns, and one that has been repeatedly flagged for spreading hate speech and conspiracy theories. 

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