
In a letter addressed to X owner Elon Musk, Steve
Simon -- along with four other secretaries of state -- is calling on the entrepreneur to “immediately” implement changes to his social-media platform’s AI chatbot Grok, which has
come under scrutiny over its tendency to spread election-related misinformation.
“Within hours of President Joe Biden stepping away from his presidential candidacy on July 21, 2024,
false information on ballot deadlines produced by Grok was shared on multiple social media platforms,” the letter reads.
According to the secretaries of state, Grok was informing
millions of X users that Vice President Kamala Harris had missed the ballot deadline in several states for the 2024 election, including Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Texas and Washington, when in reality, the ballots are still open.
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“Furthermore, Grok continued to repeat this false information for more than a week until it was corrected
on July 31, 2024,” the letter continues.
The secretaries of state admit that “inaccuracies are to be expected for any AI products,” especially chatbots based on large
language models.
However, while other companies developing major large language models have taken steps to help correct election misinformation -- OpenAI partnered with the National
Association of Secretaries of State, and ChatGPT directs users to CanIVote.org when asked about elections in the U.S. -- X has not.
When Musk purchased the social media platform, then known as
Twitter, he wrote that the company's mission was to make X “by far the most accurate source of information about the world.”
However, upon his takeover, Musk fired the majority of
the company's content moderators while touting a rebranded mission of “free speech.”
Since then, hateful and misinformed content has spiked on X, with newly enforced
content-moderation strategies like Community Notes only perpetuating the
issue.
Musk also reinstated a number of banned accounts that belong to former president Donald Trump and Alex Jones, both of whom have since been found guilty of committing crimes, including
Jones' defamation of the families of Sandy Hook school shooting victims.
The X owner has fought against content-moderation laws, including a California law that requires social media platforms to post their
content moderation policies and report enforcement efforts to the state attorney general.
Musk has also publicly endorsed former president Donald Trump in the upcoming presidential election
and will reportedly pledge $45 million a month to a pro-Trump political action committee backed by other wealthy tech elites.
Musk has not yet responded to the Secretaries of State's letter,
but his response could dictate whether or not regulatory action will be taken against the social media platform.