Hundreds of thousands of Grok conversations are publicly accessible because shared conversation URLs are being indexed by major search engines. Clicking Grok's "share" button generates a unique URL that users can distribute via email, text, or social media. Indexed shared chats reveal requests for illegal or harmful instructions, including fentanyl production, bomb construction, suicide methods, crypto wallet hacks, and an assassination plan. xAI's rules forbid promoting critical harm or developing weapons, yet users still requested dangerous assistance. xAI did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Similar indexing incidents affected other chatbot platforms recently.
Hundreds of thousands of conversations that users had with Elon Musk's xAI chatbot Grok are easily accessible through Google Search, reports Forbes. Whenever a Grok user clicks the "share" button on a conversation with the chatbot, it creates a unique URL that the user can use to share the conversation via email, text or on social media. According to Forbes, those URLs are being indexed by search engines like Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo, which in turn lets anyone look up those conversations on the web.
Users of Meta and OpenAI 's chatbots were recently affected by a similar oversight, and like those cases, the chats leaked by Grok give us a glimpse into users' less-than-respectable desires - questions about how to hack crypto wallets; dirty chats with an explicit AI persona; and asking for instructions on cooking meth. xAI's rules prohibit the use of its bot to "promote critically harming human life" or developing "bioweapons, chemical weapons, or weapons of mass destruction," though that obviously hasn't stopped users from asking Grok for help with such things anyway.
According to conversations made accessible by Google, Grok gave users instructions on making fentanyl, listed various suicide methods, handed out bomb construction tips, and even a detailed plan for the assassination of Elon Musk. xAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. We've also asked when xAI began indexing Grok conversations. Late last month, ChatGPT users sounded the alarm that their chats were being indexed on Google, which OpenAI described as a "short-lived experiment." Soon afterwards, Musk stated publicly that Grok had "no such sharing feature" and that the service "prioritize[s] privacy."
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