On Tuesday, Elon Musk's AI company xAI announced the beta release of two new language models, Grok-2 and Grok-2 mini, available to subscribers of his social media platform X (formerly Twitter). The models are also linked to the recently released Flux image synthesis model, which allows X users to create largely uncensored photorealistic images that can be shared on the site.
"Flux, accessible through Grok, is an excellent text-to-image generator, but it is also really good at creating fake photographs of real locations and people, and sending them right to Twitter," wrote frequent AI commentator Ethan Mollick on X. "Does anyone know if they are watermarking these in any way? It would be a good idea."
In a report posted earlier today, The Verge noted that Grok's image generation capabilities appear to have minimal safeguards, allowing users to create potentially controversial content. According to their testing, Grok produced images depicting political figures in compromising situations, copyrighted characters in inappropriate contexts, and scenes of violence when prompted.
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