
Elon Musk unveils Grok 3 chatbot
Elon Musk on Monday announced Grok 3, the next version of xAI's chatbot, touting it as "an order of magnitude more capable than Grok 2."
Why it matters: The move comes as Musk has been engaged in a bitter rivalry with OpenAI that has included lawsuits, a war of words and — most recently — an unsolicited $97.4 billion takeover bid.
The big picture: During a video livestream, Musk and his team said the goal of xAI and Grok is to understand the nature of the universe.
The video discussion started with benchmarks, details about xAI's new data center and the desire to create a chatbot that didn't need to be politically correct.
Musk and xAI said that Grok 3 contains advanced reasoning abilities and will continue being improved through reinforcement learning.
"We're seeing the beginnings of creativity," Musk said.
In a series of demos, Musk and his colleagues asked Grok 3 to solve a physics problem and create a game that combines Bejeweled and Tetris.
"I've played the game," Musk said, of an earlier creation using that prompt. "It's pretty good."
Between the lines: The Grok 3 API, which includes the reasoning model and DeepSearch, will launch "in the coming weeks."
A new "SuperGrok" subscription will provide advanced access to Grok's features.
There is also a mini version of the reasoning model, the company said.
Grok 3 also introduces DeepSearch, which the company described as both a new kind of search engine and an early version of agent-like capabilities.
Yes, but: xAI said Grok 3's reasoning model is in beta and is still being trained.
"This is kind of a beta where you should expect some imperfections at first," Musk said. "If you want a more polished version, perhaps wait a week."
A planned voice mode was pulled from Monday's launch, Musk confirmed in a post on X.
"Voice mode is still a little patchy, so probably launches in about a week, but it's awesome," Musk wrote.
This is a breaking story. Check back for further updates.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
15 minutes ago
- CNBC
Elon Musk's favorability among Republicans dropped 16 points since March, Quinnipiac says
Elon Musk's official role in the Trump administration recently came to an end. Many Republicans won't be sad to see less of him, according to the results of Quinnipiac University's latest public opinion survey. While a majority of Republicans still hold a favorable view of Musk, the number fell to 62% in the poll out Wednesday, down from 78% in March, Quinnipiac said. Overall, the Quinnipiac poll found that 30% of self-identified voters surveyed in the U.S. hold a favorable opinion of Musk, according to polling from June 5 to June 9. Republican and Democratic voters remain deeply divided in their views of the world's richest man, who contributed nearly $300 million to propel President Donald Trump back to the White House. Only 3% of Democrats surveyed said they held a favorable of view of the Tesla CEO, who was once seen as an environmental leader appealing to liberal values. Musk didn't respond to a request for comment. Musk and Trump had a very public falling out last week that started with Musk's disapproval of the president's spending bill and escalated into an all-out war of words that played out on social media. Musk said on Wednesday that he regretted some of the posts he made about Trump last week, adding that "they went too far." Even with a slide in his favorability, Musk is still popular among Republicans after his time running the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an effort to dramatically slash the size of the federal government. Among the Republican respondents to the early June poll, 80% rated Musk and DOGE's work as either excellent or good, while 13% said it was either not so good or poor. In the March poll, 82% of Republicans surveyed said they thought Musk and DOGE were helping the country. Read the full survey results here.
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Elon Musk backtracks on Trump criticism. How will the tech world react?
Days after a fiery online feud seemed to signal an end to the relationship between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump, the tech billionaire has backtracked. In a social media post early on Wednesday, Musk expressed regret for the very public feud, saying he went 'too far.' Musk also shared he thinks it was 'worth it' to have his net worth drop while he worked with the Trump administration on the Department of Government Efficiency. After becoming one of the leading voices of the MAGA movement before and after the 2024 election, the dispute between the president and Musk shocked their Republican supporters. While Trump has made a few comments about the fight on social media and to the press, including firing off a few warnings Musk's way, he's mostly sidestepped questions from reporters. Now, Musk seems ready to reconcile, but whether Trump is ready to repair the relationship is less clear. The relationship between Musk and Trump, and Trump and other tech industry titans, seemed to indicate the political maturation of Silicon Valley as they work to shape public policy to their benefit. But Musk's rise and fall is also a warning to those same titans, a clear example of the risks of engaging in the messy world of politics. Musk's posts come just days after the president told NBC News that the former DOGE leader was 'very disrespectful to the office of the president.' During their spat, Trump threatened that Musk's company SpaceX could face a termination of government contracts and potentially other retribution. It's unlikely that Trump will cancel SpaceX's contracts 'anytime soon,' Dan Grazier, a senior fellow at a national security think tank, told NPR. Musk in response threatened to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, but later walked it back. The feud began over Musk's displeasure with the Trump-backed 'big, beautiful bill,' which cleared the House last month. The bill would cut electric vehicle credits and could hurt his other company, Tesla. But John Helveston, a professor at George Washington University, told NPR the end of federal EV credits may not hurt Tesla as much as its competitors. Musk, a multibillionaire serial entrepreneur, spent much of the last several months positioned beside the president. His role in the Trump administration sparked concern among critics over what sway he had over Trump's decision-making, but hope among those who thought the duo could change the way Washington works. Peter Loge, a public affairs and political communications professor at George Washington University, said it may have seemed like Musk's influence on the president was 'higher and different' than other advisers, but, in reality, there's historical precedence. In the past, railroad titans, industrialists and shipping magnates have all sought to have power over government and its policymaking. Now, it's the tech sector, Loge said. 'It's a small collection of really rich people who get a lot of attention and who think they know best; they try to exert their force over public policy,' he told the Deseret News. Trump's inauguration ceremony was striking, as a string of powerful tech CEOs from Silicon Valley, including Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, and Musk, sat behind the president during his address. This growing influence comes at a time of significant change for the industry. 'A lot of these companies like crypto and AI are new to Washington and are new to trying to influence public policy. They could ignore Washington and do their own thing, and they discovered what Google, Microsoft and every other organization coming out of Silicon Valley discovered in the past decades, which is that you ignore Congress at your own peril,' Loge said. Pundits have also pointed to other tech giants who may step in to replace Musk, including venture capitalist Peter Thiel, who already has a relationship with Trump. Thiel has long been in Trump's orbit, endorsing his 2016 campaign and signaling the relationship between the tech world and Trump-era politics. There's a spiderwebbing impact that stems from Thiel, as Fortune highlighted in a report. Musk may now rely on his relationships in the tech world and with others in the administration, like Vice President JD Vance, to try to get back into Trump's favor. Meanwhile, the tech world will need to decide how far to lean into their political relationships. 'I'm heartened to see that we have, over the past two decades, seen a significant increase in terms of our political influence and engagement and we hope it continues to grow,' Ahmed Thomas, the CEO of the nonpartisan business association Silicon Valley Leadership Group, said. However, Thomas noted that going forward, he believes the tech industry should focus on emerging technologies, workforce development opportunities and be less dependent on the loudest voices in the room. 'I think for so many people, there's a focus not on opportunity, but rather where we have … more personalities and conflict,' he said. Regardless of whether Trump cuts out Musk entirely, or shifts his attention to another major tech player, Loge noted that Musk's dramatic rise and fall in the Trump administration is representative of a larger conversation about the relationship between wealth and political power. 'I think that, even as we wrestle with this new question, right, 'What about Elon Musk? What about crypto? What about AI?' It's important to remember that these are in many ways, very old questions about the connection between truth, persuasion, power and democracy,' Loge said.
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘Global arms race with artificial intelligence': TN rep. supports xAI project moving forward
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A state representative from Memphis says he supports Elon Musk's xAI, and says the company is planning up to eight more sites in the area. Republican state Rep. John Gillespie's comments came after state representatives had a press conference on Tuesday against the project moving forward. 'Why is economic development always at the cost of poor folk? Always at the cost of low wel people? We as a city have to have higher self-esteem, we as a city have to believe better about who we are,' said State Rep. Justin J. Pearson, (D-Memphis). Pearson and other democratic lawmakers met with Memphis Mayor Paul Young on Tuesday. Republican Rep. John Gillespie (R-Memphis) says he was there too, and he has a different take on xAI. Memphis mayor meets with state leaders over xAI concerns 'I'm extremely excited and the potential of all the other things that will follow,' said Gillespie. 'We're in a global arms race with artificial intelligence.' 'We're competing not with Silicon Valley, but we're actually competing with China and Russia, and North Korea. xAI and people at xAI have said that they plan on winning that arms race,' said Gillespie. In a statement, he talked about the large amount of tax dollars the company brings also saying, 'Hundreds of Memphians are currently working in construction as xAI plans to build on at least eight sites in Shelby County. ' Rep. Justin Pearson, NAACP aim to halt xAI project in Memphis 'Right now if you do look up, xAI has four sites right now that they have and they've publicly said more are to come. I don't know how many that number is, I hope it's more than eight but I suspect it will be more than eight as well,' said Gillespie. 'Well the data that I've seen and the health department has confirmed and the manufacturer of the turbines have also confirmed, they have technology on there that makes it no more than a dry cleaning or a gas station,' said Gillespie. Mayor Paul Young said there are plans to bring more community-based testing of the air quality in the area of xAI. 'My goal is to make sure our people are protected from a health perspective and that we use this project to boost our city economically,' said Mayor Young. Gillespie says he's all for the testing. It's unclear when that testing will be happening in southwest Memphis and the Boxtown community. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.