Elon Must spent almost an hour talking about Grok without mentioning its Nazi problem
Musk and the xAI team showed benchmarks they used for Grok 4, including something called "Humanity's Last Exam" that contained 2,500 problems curated by subject matter experts in mathematics, engineering, physics, chemistry, biology, humanities and other topics. When it was first released earlier this year, most models could only reportedly get single digit accuracy. Grok 4, which is the single agent version of the model, was able to solve around 40 percent of the benchmark's problems. Grok 4 Heavy, the multi-agent version, was able to solve over 50 percent. xAI is now selling a $300-per-month SuperGrok subscription plan with access to Grok 4 Heavy and new features, as well as higher limits for Grok 4.
The new model is better than PhD level in every subject, Musk said. Sometimes it may lack common sense, he admitted, and it has not yet invented or discovered new tech and physics. But Musk believes it's just a matter of time. Grok is going to invent new tech maybe later this year, he said, and he would be shocked if it doesn't happen next year. At the moment, though, xAI is training the AI to be much better at image and video understanding and image generation, because it's still "partially blind."
During the event, Musk talked about combining Grok with Tesla's Optimus robot so that it can interact with the real world. The most important safety thing for AI is for it to be truth-seeking, Musk also said. He likened AI to a "super genius child" who will eventually outsmart you, but which you can shape to be truthful and honorable if you instill it with the right values.
What Musk didn't talk about, however, is Grok's recent turn towards antisemitism. In some recent responses to users on X, Grok spewed out antisemitic tropes, praised Hitler and posted what seems to be the text version of the "roman salute." Musk did respond to a post on X about the issue blaming the problem on rogue users. "Grok was too compliant to user prompts," he wrote. "Too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially. That is being addressed."

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I just see, you know, [asset prices] are fairly well priced in the top 10% or 15%, however you measure them. And then credit spreads are also, in my view, a little unnaturally low with all the potential exposures out there. And so the world is kind of pricing in a soft landing. And we've been in that soft landing very well." Jamie Dimon discusses Fed independence JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon weighed in on the Fed on a media call this morning: "What I've seen the president say [is] he's not going to try to remove Jay Powell," Dimon said. "I think the independence of the Fed is absolutely critical, and not just for the current Fed chairman, who I respect, Jay Powell, but the next Fed chairman." Read more about the pressure on Fed Chair Powell JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon weighed in on the Fed on a media call this morning: "What I've seen the president say [is] he's not going to try to remove Jay Powell," Dimon said. "I think the independence of the Fed is absolutely critical, and not just for the current Fed chairman, who I respect, Jay Powell, but the next Fed chairman." Read more about the pressure on Fed Chair Powell JPMorgan gets a dealmaking boost as Wall Street recovered from tariff tumult JPMorgan Chase's (JPM) second quarter results came in better than expected on Tuesday, though shares in the bank were lower by less than 1% in premarket trading. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. JPMorgan Chase's (JPM) second quarter results came in better than expected on Tuesday, though shares in the bank were lower by less than 1% in premarket trading. Yahoo Finance's David Hollerith reports: Read more here. BNY CEO to Yahoo Finance on market turnaround I caught up with BNY (BNY) CEO Robin Vince by video call after the company's solid second quarter this morning. I asked him why he thinks market sentiment has turned so positive so fast: 'Remember where we were in January with the sort of US exceptionalism trade and sentiment, peak pessimism on Europe, and then we probably reversed that psychology in a lot of people quickly over the course of April and into May. But the fundamentals of the performance of the US economy really never went away.' He added, 'We have industry leading companies here in the United States… I think it is something that people are coming back to, maybe have forgotten for two or three months in the middle there.' I caught up with BNY (BNY) CEO Robin Vince by video call after the company's solid second quarter this morning. I asked him why he thinks market sentiment has turned so positive so fast: 'Remember where we were in January with the sort of US exceptionalism trade and sentiment, peak pessimism on Europe, and then we probably reversed that psychology in a lot of people quickly over the course of April and into May. But the fundamentals of the performance of the US economy really never went away.' He added, 'We have industry leading companies here in the United States… I think it is something that people are coming back to, maybe have forgotten for two or three months in the middle there.'
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Lovable becomes a unicorn with $200M Series A just 8 months after launch
Fast-growing Swedish AI vibe coding startup Lovable has become Europe's latest unicorn. Only eight months since its launch, the startup has raised a $200 million Series A round led by Accel at a $1.8 billion valuation. Like Cursor and other platforms that help developers write code and build apps by harnessing the coding and reasoning abilities of large language models, Stockholm-based Lovable helps people use natural language to create websites and apps. The startup's trajectory so far has charted straight towards the sky, with the company claiming it now has more than 2.3 million active users. Those users are using Lovable for free, to be clear, but in a recent talk, the startup's CEO Anton Osika said it now has more than 180,000 paying subscribers, and the company had reached annual recurring revenues of $75 million in seven months. That traction likely contributed to this oversized Series A. The Series A saw participation from existing investors, which include 20VC, byFounders, Creandum, Hummingbird, and Visionaries Club. In February, Creandum led a $15 million pre-series A round in the company, which at the time said it had reached annual recurring revenue of $17 million and had 30,000 paying customers. The startup has managed this hockey-stick growth with a pretty sparse team of only 45 full-time employees. That's almost as many as the high-profile angel investors who it said participated in this round, including Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski; Remote CEO Job van der Voort; Slack co-founder Stewart Butterfield; and Hubspot co-founder Dharmesh Shah.