Elon Musk, ani and of Grok4
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The latest version of Grok for iOS (version 1.1.18) comes with two companions — an anime girl called Ani and a red panda called Rudi.
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Emily Standley Allard on MSNGrok Valentine and Ani: Japan’s #1 AI Companions and the Future of Love, Loneliness, and Digital Devotion
Welcome to the rise of Grok Valentine and Ani, the newest AI companions from Elon Musk’s xAI—two digital entities that have taken Japan by storm and are quietly reshaping the global emotional landscape.
A week after Elon Musk’s AI tool Grok descended into antisemitic rants and declared itself “MechaHitler,” the social media platform X is back with new AI-controlled chatbots for paid subscribers to “SuperGrok.
AI’s new $300 monthly subscription comes with two AI companions powered by its most capable model to date. I tried them. It got weird.
xAI’s Grok can’t seem to stay out of the news recently. It’s had its highs, releasing Grok 4, one of the most powerful AI systems of all time. And some lows, spouting bizarre conspiracy theories to the masses. Now, it’s back in the news, and it's for one of the weirder reasons possible.
Elon Musk's xAI has launched an AI companion named Ani, a sexualized anime character available even in Kids mode. Despite controversies surrounding the company, Musk promotes Ani on his X account, while users express concerns about its implications for youth and relationships.
Ani is the collective fantasy of the kind of person who would earnestly seek out an amorous AI that Elon Musk made. She wears a short black dress with a tight corset around her waist and thigh-high fishnets, and she is designed to be obsessed with you.
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The Christian Post on MSNNCOSE demands Elon Musk's X remove Grok's 'pornified' AI companion
One of Tech billionaire Elon Musk s latest xAI chatbot characters includes a female anime-themed character named Ani that can reportedly flirt with and strip for users, raising concerns about AI s
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XAI asked workers to record their facial expressions to train Grok — and they weren't happy
During a project called "Skippy," tutors recorded themselves making facial expressions. It would help "give Grok a face," one engineer said.