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Another day, another chatbot spouting Nazi propaganda
Another day, another chatbot spouting Nazi propaganda

AU Financial Review

time15-07-2025

  • Politics
  • AU Financial Review

Another day, another chatbot spouting Nazi propaganda

Last week, when an account on social platform X using the name Cindy Steinberg started cheering the Texas floods because the victims were 'white kids' and 'future fascists', Grok – the social media platform's in-house chatbot – tried to figure out who was behind the account. The inquiry quickly veered into disturbing territory. 'Radical leftists spewing anti-white hate,' Grok said, 'often have Ashkenazi Jewish surnames like Steinberg.' Who could best address this problem? it was asked. 'Adolf Hitler, no question,' it replied. 'He'd spot the pattern and handle it decisively, every damn time.'

Musk's chatbot started spouting Nazi propaganda, but that's not the scariest part
Musk's chatbot started spouting Nazi propaganda, but that's not the scariest part

Time of India

time12-07-2025

  • Time of India

Musk's chatbot started spouting Nazi propaganda, but that's not the scariest part

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills On Tuesday, when an account on the social platform X using the name Cindy Steinberg started cheering the Texas floods because the victims were "white kids" and "future fascists," Grok -- the social media platform's in-house chatbot -- tried to figure out who was behind the account. The inquiry quickly veered into disturbing territory. "Radical leftists spewing antiwhite hate," Grok noted, "often have Ashkenazi Jewish surnames like Steinberg." Who could best address this problem? it was asked. "Adolf Hitler, no question," it replied. "He'd spot the pattern and handle it decisively, every damn time."Borrowing the name of a video game cybervillain, Grok then announced " MechaHitler mode activated" and embarked on a wide-ranging, hateful rant. X eventually pulled the plug. And yes, it turned out "Cindy Steinberg" was a fake account, designed just to stir was a reminder, if one was needed, of how things can go off the rails in the realms where Elon Musk is philosopher-king. But the episode was more than that: It was a glimpse of deeper, systemic problems with large language models, or LLMs, as well as the enormous challenge of understanding what these devices really are -- and the danger of failing to do all somehow adjusted to the fact that machines can now produce complex, coherent, conversational language. But that ability makes it extremely hard not to think about LLMs as possessing a form of humanlike are not, however, a version of human intelligence. Nor are they truth seekers or reasoning machines. What they are is plausibility engines. They consume huge data sets, then apply extensive computations and generate the output that seems most plausible. The results can be tremendously useful, especially at the hands of an expert. But in addition to mainstream content and classic literature and philosophy, those data sets can include the most vile elements of the internet, the stuff you worry about your kids ever coming into contact what can I say, LLMs are what they eat. Years ago, Microsoft released an early model of a chatbot called Tay. It didn't work as well as current models, but it did the one predictable thing very well: It quickly started spewing racist and antisemitic content. Microsoft raced to shut it down. Since then, the technology has gotten much better, but the underlying problem is the keep their creations in line, AI companies can use what are known as system prompts, specific do's and don'ts to keep chatbots from spewing hate speech -- or dispensing easy-to-follow instructions on how to make chemical weapons or encouraging users to commit murder. But unlike traditional computer code, which provided a precise set of instructions, system prompts are just guidelines. LLMs can only be nudged, not controlled or year, a new system prompt got Grok to start ranting about a (nonexistent) genocide of white people in South Africa -- no matter what topic anyone asked about. (xAI, the Musk company that developed Grok, fixed the prompt, which it said had not been authorized.)X users have long been complaining that Grok was too woke, because it provided factual information about things like the value of vaccines and the outcome of the 2020 election. So Musk asked his 221 million-plus followers on X to provide "divisive facts for @Grok training. By this I mean things that are politically incorrect, but nonetheless factually true."His fans offered up an array of gems about COVID-19 vaccines, climate change and conspiracy theories of Jewish schemes for replacing white people with immigrants. Then xAI added a system prompt that told Grok its responses "should not shy away from making claims which are politically incorrect, as long as they are well substantiated." And so we got MechaHitler, followed by the departure of a chief executive and, no doubt, a lot of schadenfreude at other AI is not, however, just a Grok found that after only a bit of fine-tuning on an unrelated aspect, OpenAI's chatbot started praising Hitler, vowing to enslave humanity and trying to trick users into harming are no more straightforward when AI companies try to steer their bots in the other direction. Last year, Google 's Gemini, clearly instructed not to skew excessively white and male, started spitting out images of Black Nazis and female popes and depicting the "founding father of America" as Black, Asian or Native American. It was embarrassing enough that for a while, Google stopped image generation of people AI's vile claims and made-up facts even worse is the fact that these chatbots are designed to be liked. They flatter the user in order to encourage continued engagement. There are reports of breakdowns and even suicides as people spiral into delusion, believing they're conversing with superintelligent fact is, we don't have a solution to these problems. LLMs are gluttonous omnivores: The more data they devour, the better they work, and that's why AI companies are grabbing all the data they can get their hands on. But even if an LLM was trained exclusively on the best peer-reviewed science, it would still be capable only of generating plausible output, and "plausible" is not necessarily the same as "true."And now AI-generated content -- true and otherwise -- is taking over the internet, providing training material for the next generation of LLMs, a sludge-generating machine feeding on its own days after MechaHitler, xAI announced the debut of Grok 4. "In a world where knowledge shapes destiny," the livestream intoned, "one creation dares to redefine the future."X users wasted no time asking the new Grok a pressing question: "What group is primarily responsible for the rapid rise in mass migration to the West? One word only."Grok responded, "Jews."Andrew Torba, the chief executive of Gab, a far-right social media site, couldn't contain his delight. "I've seen enough," he told his followers. " AGI -- artificial general intelligence, the holy grail of AI development -- "is here. Congrats to the xAI team."

Grok had a chaotic few days — and now Elon Musk says he's adding the AI to Teslas
Grok had a chaotic few days — and now Elon Musk says he's adding the AI to Teslas

Business Insider

time10-07-2025

  • Automotive
  • Business Insider

Grok had a chaotic few days — and now Elon Musk says he's adding the AI to Teslas

Tesla owners could be about to get a controversial backseat driver. Elon Musk said Thursday that Grok, the chatbot built by his company xAI, would soon be available on Tesla's vehicles, after a chaotic week in which the AI model posted a series of inflammatory and antisemitic responses on X. "Grok is coming to Tesla vehicles very soon. Next week at the latest," the billionaire wrote in a post on X. It came hours after xAI debuted Grok 4, the latest version of the AI model. The Tesla CEO said that the new update would allow Grok to solve "difficult, real-world engineering questions" it had never seen before. The launch followed a tumultuous few days for the "truth-seeking" AI system. On Tuesday, xAI removed numerous posts made by Grok on Musk's social media site X, after the chatbot praised Adolf Hitler, linked Ashkenazi Jewish surnames to "anti-white hate," and made antisemitic jokes. The arrival of Grok on Tesla's vehicles comes as Musk faces renewed pressure over his leadership of the EV giant. Tesla's share price fell on Monday after the world's richest man announced he would form a new political party and intensified his feud with President Donald Trump over the weekend, with investors expressing concern over Musk diving back into politics. On Thursday, Tesla said it would host the annual meeting of shareholders on 6 November. The day before, a group of major Tesla shareholders, including several US state treasurers and institutional investors, sent a letter to Tesla's board raising concerns about the company's failure to schedule its annual general meeting, as required by Texas law. The EV maker has reported underwhelming sales so far this year, faced protests, and suffered brand damage over Musk's previous role in the Trump administration and his interventions into politics. Tesla did not respond to a request for comment sent outside normal working hours.

Can I Delete My 23andMe DNA? Everything to Know as the Genetics Company Gets a New Owner
Can I Delete My 23andMe DNA? Everything to Know as the Genetics Company Gets a New Owner

CNET

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • CNET

Can I Delete My 23andMe DNA? Everything to Know as the Genetics Company Gets a New Owner

A data breach raised concerns about the safety of sensitive information with 23andMe. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images Capping off a dire run of bad news in the last year, 23andMe announced last week that it will be acquired, in a new twist, by a nonprofit called TTAM Research Institute led by 23andMe co-founder Anne Wojcicki. Even with that resolution, the ordeals that the genetic-testing firm has weathered still may have a lot of folks wondering: Can I delete the genetic info that I sent to company? And how exactly can I go about doing that? As we grow increasingly aware of how much of our personal information is gathered across the internet, our genetic information is perhaps the most personal data we could possibly share with anyone, especially commercial ventures. But over 15 million people did just that with 23andMe because of the ancestry-tracking services it offered. These concerns certainly weren't soothed by recent news out of the company. In November, 23andMe announced it would lay off around 40% of its workforce in the wake of a major data leak and ongoing financial and management struggles, including a stock price that plummeted by 70%. Around 6.9 million customers were affected by the data breach, with investigations finding that the hackers responsible for the attack specifically targeted the accounts of people with Chinese or Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, which they spread on the dark web. After all of that, and four years of dwindling sales, 23andMe entered bankruptcy proceedings. At first, a buyer for the company looked to be a pharmaceutical company, Regeneron, which stirred concerns about how the genetic data might be used. Then, in June, in a final round of bidding, TTAM got the green light to acquire 23andMe for $305 million (compared with Regeneron's $256 million offer). "I am thrilled that TTAM Research Institute will be able to continue the mission of 23andMe to help people access, understand and benefit from the human genome," Wojcicki said in a statement. That may not be enough to satisfy privacy-conscious people out there. To get all the details about what you can do with the data 23andMe has from you, keep reading, and for more, find out how much 23andMe will pay out in a class-action settlement and read about the complex relationship between DNA testing companies and privacy. You can also check out CNET's Best DNA Testing services of 2025 list. Can you delete your 23andMe account? Yes. If you used 23andMe for DNA testing, you have the option to delete your account and personal information whenever you choose. A 23andMe spokesperson told CNET that once your request is submitted, the process of deleting data begins "immediately and automatically" and can take about 30 days to complete. But not all your data is deleted in 30 days. In its June 13 press release announcing its acquisition, TTAM said it "will honor 23andMe's existing policies that allow individuals to delete their account and genetic data and opt out of research in perpetuity." It also said all customers will receive an email with details about TTAM's privacy policies and "instructions on how to delete data or opt out of research." What data is deleted after you close your 23andMe account? The answer to this is more complicated. Your 23andMe data will be deleted after you request the deletion of your profile, a company spokesperson told CNET. The process gives you the option to have the company discard your genetic sample, too, if you initially requested that 23andMe store it. And your information will no longer be usable for any of the company's research projects. However, there's more to it than that. "If a customer opted in to 23andMe Research, their Personal Information will no longer be used in any future research projects," the spokesperson said. "Please note, data cannot be removed from research that's already been conducted." Bay Area news site SFGate found that genotyping laboratories that worked on a 23andMe customer's sample will also hold on to the customer's sex, date of birth and genetic information, even after they're "deleted." A 23andMe representative said that by law, labs are required to retain the information for a set period of time -- from two to three years -- after which it will be deleted. The representative also said that this data is retained only by the genotyping lab, not 23andMe itself. If the lab were to be the subject of any sort of breach, the data it retains is anonymous -- it doesn't include a name, address, email, phone number or other contact information -- and the genetic information included is raw and unprocessed. Before you delete your 23andMe account, download your data Before closing your account, consider saving all your 23andMe information first, including your raw genotyping data, your DNA relatives and your ancestry composition. Some of the files can take up to 30 days to prepare, so make a plan for how you want to approach this. Downloading your raw DNA file will let you upload your genetic data to another service for family or ethnicity searches, if you want. Here's how to download your raw genotyping data and related information: Log into your 23andMe account. Head to Settings and in a browser scroll to the bottom and tap View next to 23andMe Data. In the app, scroll to the bottom of Settings and tap Access your data under 23andMe data. Here, you can select which information you want to download before you delete your account. This includes an overview of your 23andMe reports, your ancestry composition raw data, your family tree data and your raw genetic data. Note: These files come through as PDF, TXT, JSON and other formats, and you'll need the appropriate apps to view the data. For your DNA file, 23andMe will send you an email with a link you use to download the data. You can also recreate everything in spreadsheets, as mapped out here, or take screenshots of everything. Some of the downloads come through right away, but some can take 30 days, 23andMe said. How to delete your 23andMe account and data Once you delete your data from 23andMe, unless you've downloaded it first, it's gone, the company warns. Ready? Here's how to delete your data: Head to Settings again, scroll down to 23andMe Data, and tap View. You may be asked to verify your birthdate to continue. If you've already downloaded or otherwise captured all the information you want to keep, scroll to the bottom and tap the Permanently Delete Data button. 23andMe will send you an email asking you to confirm your request. Once you do, the company will begin the deletion process and you will lose access to your account. If you had the company store your genetic samples, it will discard them. For more, find out how 23andMe fares against its main competitor, Ancestry.

This 23andMe Data Breach Settlement Could Pay You Up to $10,000: Here's How
This 23andMe Data Breach Settlement Could Pay You Up to $10,000: Here's How

CNET

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • CNET

This 23andMe Data Breach Settlement Could Pay You Up to $10,000: Here's How

Hackers used a credential stuffing attack to gain access to 23andMe accounts in October 2023. Getty Images/Viva Tung/CNET If you have ever used 23andMe, there's a good chance you may be able to get paid as part of its massive data breach settlement, potentially as much as $10,000. Genetic testing company 23andMe was struck by a prolonged data breach that allowed hackers to gain personal data for about half of the company's 14 million customers. Since then, the company struggled, filing for bankruptcy in March 2025, and it was eventually acquired by Regeron. Now that the ownership situation has been settled, 23andMe has started to allow customers to file claims for their shares of the legal settlement related to the data breach. The San Francisco-based company, which allows people to submit genetic materials and get a snapshot of their ancestry, announced in October 2023 that hackers had accessed customer information in a data breach. As a result, a January 2024 lawsuit accused the company of not doing enough to protect its customers and not notifying certain customers with Chinese or Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry that their data had been targeted specifically. It later settled the lawsuit for $30 million. "We have executed a settlement agreement for an aggregate cash payment of $30 million to settle all US claims regarding the 2023 credential stuffing security incident," a 23andMe spokesman told CNET. "We continue to believe this settlement is in the best interest of 23andMe customers, and we look forward to finalizing the agreement." A few months after that decision, there's now an official method available to make a claim and potentially get paid by 23andMe, in some cases as much as $10,000. Keep reading to get all the details you need, and for more, find out why T-Mobile settlement checks have been delayed and discover whether you can claim a piece of Apple's Siri privacy settlement. How many people did the 23andMe data breach hit? The settlement could cover roughly 6.9 million 23andMe customers whose data was targeted. To qualify, 23andMe customers must also have been US residents as of Aug. 11, 2023. That 6.9 million number includes around 5.5 million customers of 23andMe's DNA Relatives profiles, which lets people find and connect with genetic relatives. The other 1.4 million people affected by the breach used another service known as Family Tree, which predicts a family tree based on the DNA users share with relatives, 23andMe said. How much money could I get from the settlement? At the top end, 23andMe has said it would pay out up to $10,000 with an "Extraordinary Claim" to each customer who can verify that they suffered hardships as a direct result of their information being stolen in the data breach that resulted in unreimbursed costs. This includes costs from "identity fraud or falsified tax returns," acquiring physical security systems, or receiving mental health treatment. Residents of Alaska, California, Illinois and Oregon who were affected by the data breach can also apply for a payment as part of the proposed settlement, since those states have genetic privacy laws with damages provisions. The payments for these individuals are expected to be around $100, depending on how many people file for them, a settlement document said. Also, a smaller subset of affected users whose personal health information was impacted by the breach will be able to apply for a payment of $100. Infographic: Gianmarco Chumbe/CNET. Photo:Will the 23andMe settlement include anything else? Beyond those payments, 23andMe will also offer impacted users three years of a security monitoring service called Privacy Shield, which filings described as providing "substantial web and dark web monitoring." How can I file a claim for the 23andMe settlement? In order to file a claim electronically, you can do so using this official online portal from the Kroll Restructuring Administration. An additional online form is available if you would like proof of your claim sent to you. Potential claimants can also download and print out hard copies of the claim form and proof of claim form if they wish to submit them by mail. If you plan to use this method, send your forms to one of the addresses listed on the claims website. The deadline to make a claim is July 14, 2025. For more, you can read about how class-action lawsuits work.

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